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・ Walt Kowalski
・ Walt Kreinheder
・ Walt Kuhn
・ Walt Kuhn (baseball)
・ Walt Kyle
・ Walt Lamb
・ Walt Landers
・ Walt Lanfranconi
・ Walt Clago
・ Walt Cobb
・ Walt Coburn
・ Walt Coleman
・ Walt Conti
・ Walt Corey
・ Walt Craddock
Walt Crowley
・ Walt Cudzik
・ Walt Curtis
・ Walt Czekaj
・ Walt Davis
・ Walt Dawson
・ Walt Devoy
・ Walt Dickerson
・ Walt Dickerson Plays Unity
・ Walt Dickson
・ Walt Disney
・ Walt Disney (disambiguation)
・ Walt Disney (film)
・ Walt Disney and the 1964 World's Fair
・ Walt Disney Animation Studios


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Walt Crowley : ウィキペディア英語版
Walt Crowley
Walter Charles Crowley (June 20, 1947 – September 21, 2007) was a Washington political celebrity. He first became a public figure in Seattle through his involvement with the social and political movements of the 1960s, especially the underground press. He later became more widely known as a local television personality and for his pioneering work as a local historian, including co-creating the Web site HistoryLink.org, which he considered to be his crowning achievement.
==Life==
Born in Ferndale, Michigan, the only child of engineer and inventor Walter A. Crowley and Violet King (now Kilvinger), Walt lived in Royal Oak, Michigan, Flint, Michigan, the Washington, D.C. area and Connecticut until 1961, when his father was hired by Boeing and moved to Seattle.〔
Crowley graduated from Seattle's Nathan Hale High School, winning state honors as an artist, and briefly worked at Boeing as an illustrator. Entering the University of Washington, he became active in local socialist, antiwar, and civil rights campaigns. In 1967, he joined Paul Dorpat's underground newspaper ''Helix'' as a cartoonist, writer, and editor. In 1968 he ran for the Washington State House of Representatives on the Peace & Freedom Party ticket.〔
Crowley's service as mediator between the Seattle officials, local leaders, and the community's street people led to a youth hostel and social service agency called the U District Center; Crowley directed it from 1970 until 1972. He later worked for the Seattle Model Cities Program and then for the city itself in various planning and outreach roles.
He returned to private industry in 1977 and ran unsuccessfully for the Seattle City Council.〔 He had a variety of civic involvements afterwards, including serving as president of the venerable civic organization Allied Arts.
In 1980, Crowley formed Crowley Associates, which publishes guides to Seattle and provides services for many local political campaigns. He was a columnist and commentator in many local venues, most notably a seven-year run in a "Point-Counterpoint" format with conservative John Carlson on KIRO television.〔
Crowley wrote several histories of local civic institutions, from the elite Rainier Club to the blue-collar Blue Moon Tavern. He led the campaign to save the Blue Moon from demolition, ran the task force that drafted new laws to restore historic Downtown theaters, and served on numerous other civic projects.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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