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01/28/24 12:53 AM #1962    

 

Bill Engelhardt

Pine Street --- 1955


01/30/24 02:30 PM #1963    

 

Al Peffley

For "believer" classmates - sharing a recent prophesy message hyperlink:  https://rumble.com/v497c4l-judgment-is-here-and-judgment-is-clear.html


02/03/24 11:55 PM #1964    

 

Al Peffley


02/04/24 12:48 AM #1965    

 

Bill Engelhardt


02/04/24 08:16 AM #1966    

 

Bob Nicholson

Yeah, that's what I'm reading now, Bill... or am I listening to them... I can't remember... darn


02/08/24 02:40 PM #1967    

 

Al Peffley

Bill,

Must be the text book isle sign at an Ivy League University bookstore for Political Science and graduate Law School majors?wink Justice is coming to "the Uniparty" in WDC [and I don't mean the fall election results -- IF there is a fall elecion]...buckle up!

 

 


02/10/24 03:10 PM #1968    

 

Bill Engelhardt

Just in time for the Super Bowl! 

 

 

 


02/14/24 04:23 PM #1969    

 

Bill Engelhardt

Valentine's Day 1964

 

 


02/14/24 11:48 PM #1970    

 

Diane Paulson

https://www.waitsburgtimes.com/story/2016/11/17/specials/wally-a-woodworth/10522.html

 

Wally Woodworth was my English teacher I think Senior year at Highline. Just came across his Obituary.

"In 1960 he moved to Seattle to teach at the "Hi-Line" school district and remained there until 1964.

In 1965, remaining in Seattle, he moved to the "Tyee" High School being offered a teaching position as department head of the English department. The last three years of his teaching career were to fulfill a dream of teaching in the very high school he had graduated from. In 1980, he taught in the Dayton, Wash. high school, watching the students starting as sophomores and graduating their senior year in 1983. Retirement came to Wally that year.

In all his teaching years, he taught English along with literature, journalism, drama, and typing.

In his retirement years, he lived in Walla Walla; Albequerque, New Mexico; Mesa and Apache Junction, Ariz.; and back to Dayton during the last 21 years."

He was unique, had us read Greek philosophers.


02/15/24 05:46 PM #1971    

 

Bill Engelhardt

Good catch, Diane. An excellent teacher and personable gentleman. 

Still remember my senior year in Mr. Woodworth's journalism class, putting out The High Lines under his watchful eye, guiding our creative efforts with patience, encouragement, a sense of humor, and a red editing pen for the sometimes painful fine-tuning (accuracy, punctuation, grammar, clarity), advising, honing, and always making our writing better. 

An enterprising team of talent comprising that High Lines staff in '64:

Mike Clausing (editor); Sandy Kutch; Brian (Scoop) Martin; Linda Bremer; Pat Ford; Sherry Sanders; Connie Purdy; Diane Maeda; Tim Braniff (marvelous artwork); Nancy Hughes; and Rick Steele. 

 


02/24/24 09:17 PM #1972    

 

Gregg Wilson

Trump has a short list that includes Tulsi Gabbard. One can only hope. She would make a better president than Trump.


02/25/24 05:27 PM #1973    

 

Gregg Wilson

I might not be well versed on all that Tulsi Gabbard has supported. However, I have listened to her and everything I have heard from her has made sense. She is thoroughly in support of freedom and opposed to censorship. She is against war unless it is in direct defense of the USA.

The last thing we need is a war hawk in the VP. We do need a very strong military defense - in order to avoid war.


02/26/24 11:31 PM #1974    

 

Diane Paulson

Thanks for that info Bill. I don't remember the High Lines well, my Mom didn't save any copies of it.Was it all about Highline or did it include news of the world? 

She did save a Pirate's Pen that had 3 of my pieces in it: my first publication! I wrote them Sophomore year in  Mrs Kaitis' writing/comp class that was not just a regular English class. She told me to submit them to the Pen. We had to take English every year, but I don't remember any other English teachers besides Wally Woodworth.

 


03/03/24 09:59 PM #1975    

 

Bill Engelhardt

In the 63-64 school year, Diane, the staff of the The High Lines homed in primarily on student activities (sports, academics, Class Day, Homecoming, prom, Drama Shop, teacher changes, Boy and Girl of the Month, Bruce Mennella's '57 Thunderbird, etc.), and left discussions of national and world news events to the Social Sciences classes, such as those presided over by Larry Lemmel and Bill Moeller in The Block. 


03/06/24 12:51 PM #1976    

 

Diane Paulson

was the BLOCK the Team Teaching of social studies? Lou Tice was on that team also. Later I think he became a preacher or started his own church. Lemmel and Moeller and Tice would get up on the stage in the auditorium. It was entertaining. 


03/06/24 03:01 PM #1977    

 

Bill Engelhardt

Diane is correct about the course (Contemporary Problems) and classroom setting, aka the "Block." 

Lou Tice went on to create the Seattle-based Pacific Institute. He passed away in 2012 at age 76. 

 

 


03/06/24 04:15 PM #1978    

 

Bob Beveridge

Lou came out to Connecticut to brief our management team on culture change.  Looking back, I found myself running into Highline people in Japan, Hong Kong, San Francisco, Iowa, and one or two forgotten places.  I guess the world really a small place!


03/07/24 12:21 PM #1979    

 

Ken Becker

Last fall wife Judy and I stayed at Casia Lodge in Twisp which was Lou's 15 bedroom ranch and is now a B&B.  Here is a link to the YouTube video which made by the realtor who sold the property after Lou's death:Tice Ranch | Twisp, WA (youtube.com) and an aerial photo of the  Lodge.  There are no TV's in the rooms, and we didn't see one in the common areas either.

Casia Lodge and Ranch, hotel in Twisp


03/08/24 03:52 PM #1980    

 

Al Peffley

Lou Tice was my favorite teacher at Highline. Obviously he was special to many people, worldwide. I am honored to have been his student.

Lou's health studies course at Highline was always under close scrutiny by parents who wanted their children sheltered from reality and the disadvanted/birth defects side of life. He dared to take us on field trips where others avoided mental and physical taboo subject matter (like the State "Greenbay" wards out at Buckley in the day.) He was truly a caring person. The ranch in Twisp is truly a beautitiful and impressive place from the photo presented. I fished up near Twisp in my teens and boat raced on the upper Columbia River at Brewster later in life. I like that area of Eastern Washington. I have a close friend who grew up near Grand Coulee Dam and owns a large ranch near Electric City. My father grew up in Wilbur and Govan. Twisp pine forests have been threatened by lightning-ignited wild fires in the past. It is a beautiful area, mostly secluded from the typical tourist traffic. I am glad that the Tice retreat ranch is still being used today. Sounds like a great B&B "Bucket List" item for further consideration, if available when we get to it.

https://thepacificinstitute.com/lou-tice/


03/09/24 07:21 AM #1981    

 

Virginia Wolfe (Scheffer)

Lou Tice was also one of my favorite teachers.  He made education fun.  He went on to contribute so much more than the teachings he gave us all.  His ranch is beautiful!  We could certainly use more inspirational people like him now!


03/10/24 11:15 AM #1982    

 

Marty Ellison

 

  I was in Mr Tice’s health class out in one of the portables.  He was conducting a segment on mental health, which of course was a kind of jumping off point into what later became his trademark brand.  

He introduced us to the mental torture which the North Koreans visited on our captured POWs.  Using both physical and mental torture (solitary confinement), large numbers of them died from isolation and depression.   Six years later in the Navy, I was training to fly night low level missions over North Vietnam, and part of the training was being thrown into a mock POW camp with lots of very mean instructors who took turns beating up on us.  Mr Tice’s lecture floated right to the surface of my memory.  The Navy trained us about the Code of Conduct which was instituted following the Korean War, to govern our conduct while evading capture, resisting while captured, and to always find ways to escape.  The most helpful part was a seminar we had with repatriated former POWs, one guy was held during Korea.  They taught us the tap codes we needed to communicate with other prisoners.  While deployed, I kept all this training, including from Mr Tice close to my heart.  We lost my roommate on one of these missions, but unfortunately he was never returned.
 
There was another memory of Mr Tice which was maybe not so flattering.  There was a thin shy girl who sat in the back of the room, who seldom uttered a word.  I’d known her since grade school.  Mr Tice observing her shyness thought he’d try to draw her out, so he walked back to her desk, looked down at her and announced to her and the class that her shyness really was a sign of conceit.  I sensed this was traumatic for her, she just looked at the floor and didn’t say a word.  I don’t know why that memory has stayed with me all these years, it might be tied in with Mr Tice’s  preparing me for possible capture in the future.
 
 

03/10/24 06:56 PM #1983    

 

Al Peffley

Didn't Tony Armstrong work for Lou Tice at the Institue for awhile?

I remember CIA and DoD briefings on Communist war prison tactics while I was stationed at NAS Whidbey and also working at Boeing Aerospace Strategic Analysis at Kent in the early and mid-70's. I don't remember Tice lecturing on the subject matter, but I believe you, Marty.  There was a lot of documentation published on Chinese-developed "brain washing" techniques and Japanese physical torture methods after WW II and Korea. Our squadron was on the list for Junk patrols in 'Nam but they decided to cancel the VP squadrons rotation and send us to Rota in the Med to RECCE the Russian Fleet instead. The CIA agents were quick learners of the Asian prisoner control/breakdown techniques (still used on some political prisoners today)... USJF/USA Edgewood RDEC labs in Maryland developed the psychotropic chemicals in the '70's through the '90's. LSD was a DoD chemical psychotropics development project gone rogue. The CIA;'s MKUltra Program is still in use today by international  and domestic terrorist agent handlers. The CIA needs to be reformed and have their overt/covert missions approval leash shortened, dramatically.

https://www.history.com/topics/us-government-and-politics/history-of-mk-ultra


03/11/24 12:15 PM #1984    

 

Steve Morris

I was also in Lou Tice's health class. Back in the '90's I got a job with GTE Yellow Pages (remember them?) and they had several weeks of training in Dallas. Imagine my surprise when one of the parts of the training was a multi-part series featuring Lou from his institute. That was quite a surprise! One of the people in the video was Sinyo who owned a cafe in Seattle next to the place where I worked so I would see him at least once a week and chat. it was a twofer!


03/11/24 01:07 PM #1985    

 

James (Jim) Mathews

I only knew Lou Tice as Coach Tice not as a teacher but I certainly understand his success as a motivational speaker. He and Coach Shanley were both short in stature but giants on the practice field. I'm continually reminded and motivated by the lessons I learned from them on the football field. 


03/11/24 07:15 PM #1986    

 

Ronald Goodmansen

Our management team for the bank I worked for took a class from him around 1974 +/-

 


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