Jim Knudson

This Saturday we went to a beautiful funeral service for Jim Knudson, the father of one of my good high school friends. He was diagnosed with cancer in August and died, surrounded by his family, this past week. The vigil Friday night and the mass Saturday were at St. Leo Church downtown, and both were very moving. I haven't mentioned any of this here until now, because–for all my time evangelizing social media–it's very uncomfortable to share my grief and my sadness with the open world of the Internet. But at the same time, being silent feels uncomfortable too, as if Read more…

James Monroe | The White House

via whitehouse.gov James Monroe was the last of the Virginian Presidents who were 4 out of first 5 presidents. He was also the last President to have fought in the Revolutionary War. Mostly, we remember Monroe now for the Monroe Doctrine, which asserted that no other power could interfere in the American hemisphere, and for dying on the 4th of July. But the biggest thing that happened during his tenure as president was the Missouri Compromise. (Historical and very short background: Missouri wanted to be a slave state, but free states were worried about the expanding influence they had in Read more…

Merging fire departments in UP and Lakewood

Lakewood residents were voting overwhelmingly to dissolve their 70-year-old fire district and merge with the University Place Fire Department, according to preliminary returns tonight. If approved, West Pierce Fire & Rescue would become operational March 1. via blog.thenewstribune.com I’m disappointed about the Pierce Transit results tonight, but I do like these vote results. This is a great example of how cross-municipal governments can often do better working regionally than working alone. There are often real difficulties in getting these things to happen. But here it looks like the plan was well thought out and with each municipality already having the Read more…

We are a world of readers … McSweeney’s on global literacy

At the signing of the U.S. Constitution in 1787, nearly 60 percent of about 3 million American adults could read1 but in the following 19th and 20th centuries, literacy rates in America grew rapidly. In 1870, almost 80 percent of 38.5 million Americans were literate and by 1940, almost 95 percent of 131 million citizens could read. Now, nearly 294 million Americans of about 300 million are literate and most children can read by the time they’re six or seven. According to the Census Bureau, 25-34 year-olds are now the best educated group of Americans: nearly 58 percent have some Read more…

A writing update

As I said before, The Marinara Murders is simmering in a drawer, waiting for me to pull it out and edit it. If all goes as planned, that will be next Saturday, where I try to read the book all in one sitting. I'm very excited to re-read it and see how I did, but in order to know that, I need some distance from it (which is why I've waiting more than 7 weeks since I finished it. But I've also decided that the best way to get a little distance from the book is to start the next Read more…