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Submitted by Starwing on Wed, 04/25/2007 - 10:32pm.
Hello my fellow OlyBloggers!

I have a NEW MYSPACE PAGE devoted exclusively to my campaign efforts.

So go on... click on over and check it out. If you're on MySpace, feel free to add me. A complete REAL website will be up soon. :)

Thanks!

-- Toren

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Submitted by emmettoconnell on Wed, 04/25/2007 - 11:44am.
Apr 28 2007 - 4:00pm
Apr 29 2007 - 3:00pm
The Evergreen State College Geoducks will play their last series of the year against Central Oregon Community College this Saturday. Evergreen and Central Oregon will play a double header on Saturday, with the first game starting at 10am. That will be followed by another 10am game on Sunday.

All Geoduck baseball home games are played at Crandall Field at Olympia High School.

For more information, go to http://geoduckbaseball.wordpress.com

Update! I have it on good authority that the times have changed. The first game will be Saturday at 4:00 pm. There is a double-header on Sunday, beginning at 10:00 am. The second game of the DH will start 30 minutes after the first game is over.

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Submitted by Robert Whitlock on Wed, 04/25/2007 - 11:15am.
Apr 26 2007 - 1:30pm
Apr 26 2007 - 8:00pm
[via email:]

Chernobyl Symposium and Commemoration

A Special Program of Information and Remembrance

About the World’s Worst Accident With Nuclear Power

This Program is Free and Open to the Public

 

The Evergreen State College

Olympia, Washington

Thursday, April 26, 2007

1:30 – 4:45 PM: Library Fourth Floor

5:00 – 5:55 PM, No-host Dinner at the Greenery

6:00 – 8:00 PM: Recital Hall, Communications Building

 

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Submitted by Rob Richards on Wed, 04/25/2007 - 10:17am.
Three staff members of B&R, Phil Owen, Meta Hogan, and Selena Kilmoyer are moving onto new paths in their lives. Selena will be working at Partneres In Prevention Education as well as on other community projects. Phil is looking to find work in a similar field and to support Meta in her run for mayor of Olympia

The Olympian published an article on the front page this morning that contained glaring factual errors. I'd like to clear a few of them up.

First, as Phil pointed out in the online comments, B&R staff do not "live for free", we recieve room and board and a $200/ month stipend (not $600/month as Diane Huber wrote in the Olympian) for pretty much being on call 24/7 and sometimes putting in 60 or more hours of "work" in a week. We certainly don't do this for the money.

Second, the Bread and Roses Advocacy Center is located at 1009 E 4th Avenue, it hasn't been at 121 State Ave. for a year now.

Third, and most important, the women at the guesthouse are not "losing their housing", the alarmism of this article is way off base. It was made clear to Diane Huber that the Guesthouse will not be shutting down until all of the women have places to go that are safe. The Guesthouse is a transitional housing situation, not a permanent housing situation, this means that the women there were working on moving out already. While these recent developments might speed the transitional process a bit, it's not a surprise to the women that they are expected to move on.

Bread and Roses is a grassroots community based organization that operates on a budget of just a bit over $200.000/year. When changes like this take place, we sometimes are forced to contract a bit. It is sad that it affects our friends on the streets, but in the long run it is better to, as in this case, close down the Guesthouse than to have the remaining staff try to juggle that with what they're already doing. Trying to that would most likely cause a lot of burnout and failure.

P>The future of Bread and Roses is somewhat undecided. We are considering housing families with children, not because the need is necesarily greater, but because it might be a bit more sustainable for a smaller staff. Whatever we decide to do, we are going to make sure that there are many opportunities for the greater community to be involved with the Bread and Roses community.

If anyone has questions or concerns about the future of B&R, please contact Rob Richards at 360.359.3293

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Submitted by Phil Owen on Wed, 04/25/2007 - 9:52am.
When I worked as a professional E.M.T., I attended a number of trainings on how to deal with something called a "mass casualty incident".  A mass casualty incident is an incident which, by its definition, overwhelms the resources at hand.

If there is one thing I have learned in my time at Bread & Roses, it is that poverty is a daily mass casualty incident.

Meta and I are leaving Bread & Roses after serving for four years as full-time, live-in volunteers.  Selena leaves with us after offering six years of service.  We will be moved out by May 31st.  Four years (or six!) is a long time to be a full time volunteer, and it is time for us to move on.

Meta will be focusing on her campaign for Mayor.  I'm working on a book.  We both will be looking for part-time jobs in social services to support ourselves.  Selena moves on to do some very exciting work with Partners in Prevention.  The three of us will be renting a pretty little house together on the south end of Olympia, and will be taking the next year to rest, recuperate, and reflect.  And then we're going to try something new and exciting! (You're just gonna have to wait until then to find out the details, though... it'll be like a good birthday surprise:)  We will continue to be active in the community as volunteers and activists.

As I leave Bread & Roses, there is one last thing I would like to say on behalf of the B&R community:  Get involved.  Get active.  Volunteer.  We all have the ability to make a difference in our community, and if we have the ability it is incumbent on us to use it.  The homeless need you.
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Submitted by stevenl on Wed, 04/25/2007 - 6:20am.

During a recent visit to Oly City Hall I was reminded of an odd thing about the facilities during the early years (1960s to maybe early 1970s). In the center ring, where there is now a circular lawn surrounding the chambers, there used to be a moat. I'm serious. And in the moat there were really big fish, like trout. Maybe another long-time area resident out there in OlyBlog land can back me up on this.

Anyway, I propose the moat be reinstated and stocked with nutria. It will provide a lure for the caimans, where they can be easily captured and contained. There is no question the small amount of taxpayer dollars required to make this conversion would be well worth the investment.

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