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Submitted by Rick on Mon, 10/31/2005 - 9:48pm.
Nov 3 2005 - 6:00pm
Submitted by stevenl on Mon, 10/31/2005 - 6:59pm.
In 1974-75 there were a couple guys who were residents of C Dorm and they had a fun little game. Their window faced the central courtyard, giving them a full view of all the westward facing windows of A Dorm. At night these two liked to call up certain rooms in A Dorm in order to get the residents to turn on their lights. They were playing a form of tic-tac-toe.
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Submitted by Rick on Mon, 10/31/2005 - 8:45am.
Here is a "train cam" that is continuously updated (every 90 secs.). I guess you can use it to tell if your train has arrived or not. The site shows both north and south views.
Submitted by Rick on Mon, 10/31/2005 - 8:14am.
Oct 31 2005 - 12:00pm Monday, October 31, 7:00 p.m. Worthington Conference Center, St. Martin's College, Lacey. 5300 Pacific Ave. SE. Speaker will discuss fight against open-pit gold mining in Guatemala The Saint Martin's University Social Action Club invites the public to hear a representative of the AJCHMOL Mayan Integral Development Association, Rolando Lopez Maya-Mam, at 7:00 p.m. Monday, October 31. The free program, “The Guatemalan Perspective: Resisting the Hazardous Effects of Globalization,
Submitted by stevenl on Sun, 10/30/2005 - 10:03am.
In Part 17 I talked about the 1972 election, and it got me to remembering another sideshow of that campaign season which, in hindsight, was chilling. Dan Evans was running for his third term for Governor. His challenger was none other than the man he had defeated in 1964, former two-term Gov. Al Rosellini. When Evans made that first run, part of his campaign was that no one should serve three terms as Governor, a point Rosellini liked to bring up in 1972. But Washington being Washington, the political alliances were very twisted. It was not uncommon to see Evans and McGovern bumper stickers side by side. Although Rosellini had been a progressive governor, particularly in the area of social services, he had become quite conservative by the early 1970s. When McGovern appeared in Seattle with Washington State Democrats, Sen. Magnuson was cheered, but Rosellini and Scoop Jackson were actually booed. Anyway, a Dan Evans campaign worker had apparently infiltrated a Rosellini meeting, or something like that, and was caught in the act. The press hyped this episode, and I'm not joking, as "The Watergate of the West." I remember the young man who was accused of wrongdoing making frantic denials to the TV news people. His hair was longish and his eyes were intense and wild. His name was Ted Bundy. If only his 15 minutes of fame had ended there. Among his many victims, according to Bundy's confession shortly before his execution, was Evergreen student Donna Manson, killed in early 1974.
Submitted by Robert Whitlock on Sat, 10/29/2005 - 9:19pm.
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Submitted by stevenl on Sat, 10/29/2005 - 5:47pm.
How far to the Left was early Evergreen? Here's one measurement. In 1972 the Democrats nominated George McGovern, probably the most liberal major party personality to run in my lifetime. I worked as a volunteer in the Olympia HQ. Since my hair was too long for doorbelling, they had me stuffing envelopes, licking stamps, making phone surveys. There were entire precincts in Lacey where I found more people saying they were voting for nutball American Independent Party candidate John G. Schmitz (father of Mary Kay Letourneau) than I found voting for our guy. Most of the local Scoop Jackson Democrats sat out the campaign. We knew we didn't have a chance, but we believed if there was ever an election where it was clearly good vs. evil, this was it. And America overwhelmingly chose evil. It probably didn't help that although McGovern was a decent man, he was a terrible politician. Still, I'm glad I had the experience of being part of that campaign. The HQ was across the street from the State Theater, which was showing Robert Redford's "The Candidate" through most of the time we were there. The week McGovern got trounced, they were showing a new movie entitled, "When Legends Die." We thought that was pretty funny, actually. Oh, back to Evergreen. Most of my fellow volunteers were irreverent and fun-to-be around senior citizens, not connected to the College at all (in 1972, I'm sure I thought people who were over 35 were senior citizens). We did have a few key people who were TESC connected, but there was a conspicuous absence of student help. Apparently, whenever they were approached to help out, many students dismissed McGovern as just another capitalist lackey. Leave it to me to volunteer for a guy who was rejected by Olympia locals AND Evergreen.
Submitted by Rick on Sat, 10/29/2005 - 3:21pm.
From today's PI: OLYMPIA, Wash. -- Army Sgt. Walt Gaya spent his time in Iraq peering - through the scope of his sniper rifle and through the lens of his camera, snapping black-and-white pictures of his unit and of life in the turbulent city of Mosul.This part is a little frustrating: The wound has turned his life upside down.This guy's been almost blown up on two separate occasions, and we can't figure out how to make him a citizen.
Submitted by djmega on Sat, 10/29/2005 - 2:03pm.
FREE RADIO OLYMPIA NEWS REPORT 1:40 PM Saturday October 29:
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A report has just come in that military transport ship USNS FISHER is arriving in the Port of Olympia. This 951.4 foot long ship is probably the largest yet to enter our port.At 1 PM Drew Hendricks initially reported heightened security at the port and the sighting of a Crowley Coast Guard tow ship, three zodiacs, and another 14 foot steel-hulled Coast Guard vessel at the port. The quay is empty and probably awaiting a drop-off of materials. **BE ADVISED: Materials unloaded from military ships in the Port of Olympia are often spent materials from the war in Iraq and may be contaminated by Depleted Uranium, a carcinogenic radioactive material. This material is often transported out of the port compound by way of the railroad. Click on "Read More" to see the specifications of this ship. |
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