Posted on 10/17/2008 11:37:46 AM PDT by sunmars
From HillBuzz
There’s something incredibly interesting in the Mills College yearbook from 1996 or 1997
Cryptic clue
Anyone in California who can head over to the library at Mills College will find something very interesting in the Mills College yearbook from 1996 or 1997.
All this talk of plumbers lately made us think about butchers, BAKERS and candlestick makers too.
Who was the other guy, or gal, in that tub?
Oh yah…baker.
A rub-a-dub-dub!
Wonder if there are photos of any bakers in those Mills College yearbooks.
In Martinique, they’ve got a baker or two, from what we hear. No pictures though.
THOSE are all in California. San Francisco area. At this address:
5000 MacArthur Boulevard
Oakland, California
----------------------------------------------
Now for the Killer part string us in the face.
Rick Ayers received his Masters in Education at Mills College (1997)
Richard James Ayers, himself a member of the Weather Underground
He was married to Melody Ermachild
They have lots of honorable mentions in the FBI files.
I'd read about the rape, but hadn't put the two of them together. Thanks for connecting them.
Verbatim of the original post---Sorry, I still don't get the jist. It's got the appeal of an in-joke...and I'm not in on it, apparently. Also, the purpose of posting is to inform. I've read this 3-4 times and still not informed.
The UKs Daily Mail is running as story about a relationship Barack Obama had with an aide during his 2004 Senate campaign. Of course this is an MSM source, and it may or may not be true. Bloggers have named the person as Vera E Baker. If anything occurred, it would have happened four years ago. Vera Baker is now about 33.
According to FEC Senate campaign records Baker was paid under the job title National Finance Director for Obamas campaign. However, Claire Serdiuk was usually listed as the campaign Finance Director. So Vera Bakers position had a confusing job title, but that may mean nothing.
When Vera Bakers consulting website was functioning, it stated, Previously, she served as the National Finance Director on Senator Barack Obamas 2004 Senate campaign. She also served as the Deputy Political Director at the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.
Baker, who now lives mostly in Fort de France, Martinique, in the Caribbean, has denied any claims of a relationship, or that Michelle Obama expressed any issue with her. It would be a real shame if Vera Baker had no romantic involvement with Obama, but got pulled down into tawdry innuendo.
Democrats are claiming this is a smear campaign from the Republicans, but this story first surfaced near the end of the Hillary Clinton - Barack Obama race. At present, the primary sources for this story seem to be from Democrats.
(source: http://gretawire.foxnews.com/2008/10/16/open-thread-461/comment-page-4/)
This is like reading Ted Casablancas from E!
What the hell are they saying? Vera Baker has two kids in the Caribbean, that I get; but the other?
C’mon. Out with it.
Another guy who spent his entire life sucking off the taxes of others.
Sounds like a hippie chick.
author spotlight
MELODY ERMACHILD CHAVIS is a private investigator who works on trials and appeals for death row inmates. She has served as cochair of the Berkeley Community Partnership for Substance Abuse Prevention and has been honored by the Berkeley Commission on the Status of Women for her outstanding contribution to the community. She is a youth justice advocate who volunteers with a community gardening program for youth at risk. A student of Zen Buddhism, she is a member of the board of the Buddhist Peace Fellowship. She is a mother and grandmother, and lives with her husband in Northern California.
Altars in the Street
A Courageous Memoir of Community and Spiritual Awakening
Written by Melody Ermachild Chavis
ABOUT THIS BOOK
A wonderfully written memoir, overflowing with miraculous stories, of a Buddhist private eye who vows to heal her community's suffering from violence and racism.
Altars in the Street is for people who live in cities and those who have fled them. It will speak to anyone who cares about the future of our children, our neighborhoods, and our nation, as well as anyone who wants to look truthfully at the relationship between poverty and prisons and between community and education. Drawing on deep reserves of good humor, common sense, and practical experience of nonviolent action, Melody Ermachild Chavis has written a moving testament to the power of spirit in today's often cynical world.
Can't wait for the TV series.
Wrong context in which to
mention God. Chill.
Barry was 8 at the time of the rape... No, that was some older married dude.
Thanks ... got it .. and thanks for your courtesy, an apparent signal difference between newbies and vets .... ;)
They have lots of honorable mentions in the FBI files.
The more, the better
They have lots of honorable mentions in the FBI files.
The more, the better
And also when Bill Ayers bombed his way to fame and tenure.
Obama's been 8 a lot.
That’s interesting. She has the same career path that John Edwards’ whore had - no previous experience, no real job, confusing job title, menace to the wife, etc.
Too bad she doesn’t want to be harassed - perhaps she can call Joe the Plumber for advise on that one.
I used to work with a guy who retired about 1990. When he retired, he set off to get a Ph.D. in environment studies or some such, which was his priviledge. I’ve toyed with getting an advanced degree in Physics or Astronomy once things “settle down”. Even at an age when I should be an empty-nester, my grandson and his grandmother keep me far too busy. Maybe when I retire?
Online physics degrees seem to be pretty lame, aimed at shoring up the credentials of H.S. physics teachers, no thanks.
I’m an MSEE, I studied EE vs. Physics purely for career reasons, a decision that turned out well. In the event, I’ve actually worked more as a physicist and mathematician for the last twenty or so years.
I guess what particularly struck me was that he acquired an education degree. No reasonable person would do that out of intellectual curiosity or for a sense of achievement. (My favorite barber, born in 1918, always rued the fact that he had been too much of a smart ass to complete high-school. He died, “in the saddle” at 76.)
Vera Baker
Rick Ayers (brother to TERRORIST Bill Ayers)
Rick Ayers has taught at Berkeley High School since 1995. He is cofounder and has been the lead teacher of Communication Arts and Sciences (CAS) since 1997.
Saying that many newbies post things that are opaque is almost as far a stretch as saying everyone who’s died of cancer has eaten carrots; therefore carrots cause cancer.
My questioning your rock dwelling is in reference to your perceived ignorance as to who Vera Baker was.
lately, not too many good posts, the talent has left, too many purges.
I didn't get back to work on my BA for about 5 years. I then worked on my masters. After a misunderstanding with my mentor over my thesis, I put it all aside and never finished it.
I had completed all the course requirements, and turned in my thesis. Unfortunately I got stuck with a mentor who had never worked with a graduate student before. He gave me bad info about how to complete my thesis. First he accepted it, then 3 months later said it had to be longer. I rewrote it all and turned it in. He returned it and said I needed to rewrite the introduction, to include things that had nothing to do with the subject matter I was writing on. It was a history paper. I consulted with a couple friends who had expertise (one a doctorate in history, another a masters in Archaeology), and they said the guy was wrong.
So after getting the runaround for several months from him and the school, I got ticked off and walked away. That was almost 20 years ago. I'm 61 now and retired. I never needed a degree for my job. I did it to prove to myself that I could. Everything I learned from the experience, I could have learned on my own. I don't look upon it as a total waste though, because I did enjoy the classroom experience. I've been retired for almost 5 years now, and have no desire to take any more college courses. Good luck though in whatever you decide to do.
I could have learned everything I needed to know about EE in a two year associate’s program. At least half of my undergraduate training was worthless, or worse. (I suspect that four year courses have more of this than two year courses.) It was actually annoying because a lot of professors were either incompetent (at least pedigogically) or indifferent and a lot of the work was sloughed off on poorly trained TAs. Really a scandal.
Night graduate classes were where my professor hired me for my current job, so not a total waste. I did learn a little bit and it sort of opened my eyes. But my professor got me started on more interesting work, essentially working in applied physics and mathematics, which I learned, like you, otj.
I still think academic physics (which I only took as an undergraduate) was the most competently taught.
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