Thursday, February 16, 2012

Needless to say, people from mob organization University of Washington go out of their way to make me feel paranoid




Just because I am defending my private property rights.

This town is a major coward town full of pathetic cowardly people.

I can't even get a decent meal anywhere anymore because of cowards who want to find some way to inflict pain and with premeditation so they don't get arrested by the police.

The people in the grocery stores I go to are completely corrupted too by racketeers and its not like I have much choice. I don't even have a car to drive around to find someplace else. Not that matters either because Microsoft al-Qaida follows me around everywhere regardless of my mode of transportation.

Also, I noted just a short while ago that the racketeering organization University of Washington genome sciences building is very close, according to Google maps, to the south end of the Battery Street tunnel.

WHORES RULE THE UNITED STATES!










http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=20030709&slug=allenbuilding09m


The Seattle Times Search


Wednesday, July 9, 2003


New computer science building seen as boost to UW program

By Robert Marshall Wells

Seattle Times staff reporter

A new $72 million building nearing completion at the University of Washington is expected to significantly heighten the profile of the school's respected Computer Science and Engineering (CSE) program.

The Paul G. Allen Center for Computer Science and Engineering is named for the Microsoft co-founder, who donated more than $10 million to the project. Another 250 donors — including Microsoft, Intel, prominent business people and dozens of private citizens — raised an additional $32 million in private money. The UW contributed $20 million, while the Legislature approved a direct state investment of about $10 million for the project.

"There was recognition by the technology community that the UW CSE department is an important asset," said Tom Alberg, chairman of Seattle's Madrona Group and a co-chairman of the Allen Center's fund-raising campaign. "It's a good example of the private community getting together and working with a great public institution to accomplish an important goal."

The Allen Center is one of several new UW buildings being constructed with largely private funds. Other projects include a $150 million Genome Sciences and Engineering Building, expected to open in 2005, and the $81 million William H. Gates Sr. School of Law, scheduled to open later this year.

Until now, the UW's computer-science program has been housed in Sieg Hall, a 1960s-era building whose ceilings and walls literally began to crumble in recent years. Until nearly $200,000 in temporary, cosmetic fixes were performed in 2000, chunks of metal fell from Sieg so frequently that faculty members began referring to them as "pieces of the rock" and sending them home with visitors and prospective graduate students as mementos.

Space also has been a problem in Sieg. Some graduate students have had to set up offices in stairwells, while the department's motion-capture laboratory has performed triple duty as a classroom and conference room.

"People are piled up on top of each other," said Rob Short, a Microsoft vice president active in raising money for the new building. "There's not enough room for anything."

Official dedication of the Allen Center is scheduled in early October