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Originally posted by rainmaker
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Originally posted by Mark Padgett
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Originally posted by rainmaker
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Originally posted by Mark Padgett
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Now, if you want really liberal, try Eugene (not Eugene Levy - the city of Eugene, Oregon - although Eugene Levy seems pretty liberal to me also )
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Don't forget, though, that Evergreen College is not in Oregon, but WA....
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OK, Juulie. I give up. I have no clue as to the meaning of this reference. Is Evergreen supposed to have a reputation as a liberal college? Is it a "liberal arts" college and this was a hidden pun?
Surely, only UC Berkeley can challenge the U of Oregon for the "Most Liberal University" trophy.
Juulie - you got some 'splainin to do.
See you Friday on the court. Please bring your whistle. Thanks.
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Hey, no problem. I've done several games now where I didn't share the whistle, and it worked out pretty well. Thanks for letting me know ahead of time that this is how you prefer to work.
Regarding, Evergreen College, I can't believe that you've never heard of it. It is (or was at one time) a very liberal college with a lot of experimenting (educational and otherwise) in its past. I'm not sure where it is in Washington, but I'm thinking Olympia? Tacoma? They were one of the colleges in the '60s and '70s that tried "open classrooms" and "flexible schedules" and no grades, and other radical ideas. People would go there if they wanted to major in Philosophy of Basketweaving and Paradigm Psychology and stuff like that. Lots of artists. Lots of hippies (this was back in the dinosaur era...). And a very hip reputation.
I'm pretty sure it's still in operation, although I haven't been wrong yet this month, so I suppose it might be about time... Josh must run in the wrong circles if none of his friends went there.
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Technically, it is called The Evergreen State College and is (I think) a UW spin-off. My older son graduated from there in 1997 with a degree in Environmental Science and he works for the National Fisheries part of NOAA. Chris is very smart (takes after his mom), but has some very strange ways of looking at life in general. He loved the school because of the open class rooms and no set structure. He signed a "contract" with his advisor where they mutually agreed on what he would take for a quarter (16 hours) and he could either come to class or not -- his choice. He was required to turn in certain material at certain points during the quarter.At the end of the "contract" period, he and his advisor would go over what he accomplished, and if my son deviated from the "agreed to" course work, he may or may not receive credit for part, or possibly none, of the crdits. Weird! First time I visited the campus, I thought I had stepped back into the 60's -- tie dyed T-shirts, long hair, sandals, and non-shaved legs (women

). Looked like a Grateful Dead concert.