Monday, January 28, 2013
Monday January 28
Two people at 5:00PM, then six of us when six o'clock came. Chilly and light rain. We continued an ongoing winter conversation about colds and flu, and we discussed "shared space", a traffic management scheme based on removing all traffic signals and signs.
Sunday January 27
Three people to start the hour. Cold and rainy. We had a visitor, but the same three were there at 6:00PM.
Wednesday January 23 through Saturday January 26
Four cold and sometimes rainy hours. Each day there were two people to begin the vigil, and four or five at the end. We had some interesting discussions, about an article from Harper's magazine discussing the Israeli elections and particularly the strongly pro-settlement party HaBayit HaYehudi and about local reactions to the Windows and Mirrors art exhibit in the Concourse Gallery of the Memorial Union. On Saturday a young man from Oman stopped to have his picture taken with a peace sign in Arabic.
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Tuesday January 22
A couple of people at 5:00PM, six or so at the end of the hour. Maybe a little less cold than the last few days. We had one conversation about a recent Harper's Magazine article telling the story of city laws, in Fremont Nebraska, intended to enforce federal regulations about undocumented immigrants; and more generally we wondered about the pros and cons of decentralization.
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Monday January 21
The US holiday honoring Martin Luther King Jr was an everyday vigil: three or four of us at the beginning of the time, six or seven at the end. A cold hour, we talked about food and warmth.
Sunday, January 20, 2013
Sunday January 20
Two people at the beginning of the hour, three when the vigil ended. Or maybe three and four, instead of two and three, if we count the dog. We talked some about dog shows and dog training. I wonder if, when dogs get together, they talk about training their persons.
Saturday, January 19, 2013
Saturday January 19
Half a dozen people for much of the hour. Two people stopped by, one to announce a reading at the Book Bin ("There is a Place in the Throat that has No Voice") and another to say that Corvallis now has a group 350Corvallis.org affiliated to 350.org. As usual, much happening here.
Friday January 18
Two at 5:00PM, then four before long, and five people when six o'clock came. It was not as cold as the day before; we stood the hour through without stealing glances at the courthouse clock. :)
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Thursday January 17
One person at 5:00PM, seven when six o'clock came. Another cold afternoon, but dry, and most of us were dressed warmly. We talked a little about favorite foods, like sweet potato tater tots. :)
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Tuesday Jan 15
Three people at 5:00PM, maybe nine at the end of the vigil. This afternoon we were accompanied by a pray-in for the climate, on the side lawn of the courthouse. Because of traffic noise we could not hear much of what went on.
Monday January 14
Two people to start, then four early in the hour, then seven when the clock reached six o'clock. The evening was perceptibly warmer than the day before. In the south a pretty sunset sky featured the new moon.
Monday, January 14, 2013
Sunday January 13
Three people at 5:00PM, seven at the end of the hour. Very very cold for Corvallis, and we were glad when the clock struck six.
Sunday, January 13, 2013
Saturday January 12
Seven or eight of us throughout the hour. A regular participant came near the end of the hour; he recounted that he had just visited the Windows and Mirrors exhibit in the Memorial Union Concourse Gallery and found the lights turned out in the display cases. (Windows and Mirrors is a collection of 25 paintings, a memorial to civilian casualties of the US war in Afghanistan.) When he asked why, a MU worker told him that the lights had been turned out as a protest, because a few people at the university had found some of the images offensive.
Friday January 11
Two at 5:00PM, three of us at 6:00. Further up the block along Fourth Street, there was another vigil, asking for an end to human trafficking.
Thursday January 10
Three people to start the hour, ten of us at 6:00PM. We had a visitor from Houston and two young boys, the youngest people to attend the vigil so far this year.
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Wednesday January 9
Two people on the sidewalk at 5:00PM. Three or four others stopped in during the hour, but at 6:00 we were only three. We talked for a while about the visitor yesterday who felt like the protest was dishonoring the memory of the soldiers who have died in the United States' wars.
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Tuesday January 8
Four at 5:00PM, then eight at the end of the hour. About 5:30 a young man hurried across Fourth Street to ask us what we were about. "We are opposing the War on Terror." "Then aren't you dishonoring the soldiers who fought and died for your freedom?" The dialogue continued for ten minutes or so, and ended unresolved but amicably. I am sorry that we never asked our visitor about the reasons and the experiences behind his concerns. :(
Monday January 7
Four or five people to start the hour, then about six at the end. A quiet and uneventful hour, made more pleasant by Monday cookies. :)
Monday, January 7, 2013
Sunday January 6
Four people to start the hour, eight when the clock struck 6:00. We talked about books: books about Abraham Lincoln and books by Marx; and we wondered what Lincoln thought about Marx's writings. Did you read a particularly good book in 2012?
Saturday January 5
Four people at the beginning of the hour, five at the end. Cold but dry. We shared a postcard from our friend and occasional visitor from Tucson. Greetings from afar are a happy start to the new year.
Wednesday January 1
The first day of 2013 saw a medium-size group at the vigil, maybe ten people. Can we end war this year? :)
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
Monday December 31
The last day of 2012. Our "war without borders" continues. Three of us to start the hour, with some cold rain. The rain stopped after 15 or 20 minutes, and there were five of us when the clock struck six for the last day of this year.
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