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Submitted by Sarah on Sat, 11/12/2005 - 9:05pm.
Found a slideshow Anti-War Protest at Port of Olympia Nov 18,2004. Great photos by Tony Overman.
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Submitted by Rick on Sat, 11/12/2005 - 7:17pm.
What Olympia establishment are you more likely to patronize now that it will not be filled with yucky, nasty, make-your-clothes-smell-for-days cigarette smoke? I do believe that I might like to shoot some pool at the Eastside Club.
Submitted by Sarah on Sat, 11/12/2005 - 2:51pm.
I tucked OlyBlog into the list of external links for the Olympia, Wa. Wikipedia page. I notice there is room for all sorts of additions and adjustments, including to a "List of people who lived in Olympia, Washington".
» Very easy for anyone to join in.
Submitted by Sarah on Sat, 11/12/2005 - 12:43pm.
Rosie's Place, a place for people 21 and under, is now open 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM, weekdays. It is located on the second floor of the big building (Community Youth Services) on the corner of Plum and State Ave.
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We are a safe place to come get food, hang out, grab hygiene supplies, talk with youth advocates, use our computers, check email, play games, join in workshops and activities, and chill-out in a comfortable, friendly, safe youth space. Rosie's Place is given credit in The Olympian for helping diminish problems at the downtown transit center.
Submitted by Sarah on Sat, 11/12/2005 - 11:59am.
I'm looking for photos taken at a past May Day here in Olympia, the one on Harrison and Division. Specifically looking for photos of the police lined up in riot gear.
» Found a slideshow of photos from May Day 2002, but not yet exactly what I am looking for. I also need to sort out the exact year the westside event happened. Update: The year is 2001, found this handy summary in the emergency management archives- On May 1 approximately 300 protesters assembled near the south entrance of Black Lake and Harrison Avenue in Olympia Washington as part of the May Day Protest Activity. The protesters began moving toward downtown Olympia and the 5th Street Bridge around 4:35 PM but returned to a vacant lot on Black Lake Boulevard without major incident.
Submitted by stevenl on Sat, 11/12/2005 - 10:18am.
There have been many fine lectures it has been my privilege to attend at TESC, but three of them especially stick out in my mind. This trio of presentations reveal, I'm afraid, that I wasn't really all that intellectual as a student. It was the form rather than the content that sticks in this old cartoonist brain of mine. The first lecture was probably the most utilitarian in terms of helping me later in life. Thad Curtz was giving a talk on child psychology. He played a tape of a baby crying for five straight minutes without interruption. For most of us 20-somethings who had yet to discover the sleeplessness of parenthood, this was excruciating and seemed to last forever. When I became a father a few years later, having the crying limited to five minutes would've been welcome. I can't remember what the point of his lecture was supposed to be, but Byron Youtz gave the second memorable class. He had set up a giant mobile in one of the lecture halls, and set it spinning. But something went horribly wrong and it careened out of control, threatening to clobber anyone who could not duck. A real Pit and the Pendulum situation. There might have been some screaming. That always spices up any educational experience. The third memorable lecture was around 1978-79 by the late, great Richard Jones for the Shakespeare program. And this one actually had an impact on TESC administrative policy. Some of us were loitering around the outside of the lecture hall doors, just visiting before going in, when we saw a particularly agitated classmate of ours push past us and storm in. A few seconds later we heard Richard yell that student's name followed by a line I normally associated with B-movies, "Nooooooooooooooo!" Then we saw several dazed looking students come out the door as if a bomb had just gone off. Apparently our stirred up fellow pupil had leaped over several rows of seats to pound the living daylights out of another attendee. A few years later, the existence of a "problem-student" monitoring task force had been revealed at TESC, and I believe Richard was a member. He cited the 1978-79 incident as the spark that created this group. |
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