Located in the Cascade Range of the Pacific Northwest in the state of Washington is the majestic Mount Rainier. A large active stratovolcano, Mount Rainier is the highest mountain in Washington with an elevation of 14,411 ft (4,392 m), and surrounding it is a vast swath of wilderness covering 236,381 acres that has been designated as the Mount Rainier National Park. Rich with wildlife, waterfalls, subalpine meadows, glaciers, and old growth forest, the area is very popular for all manner of outdoor activities including hiking, camping, and mountaineering, attracting droves of people every year. However, Mount Rainier seems to be in a sense hungry, in that it is a hotspot for odd unsolved disappearances, and there have been many strange cases of people who have come here to never leave.
in the northeast but also in the country. so i really, really am grateful that you could spare the time to host me tonight. four or five years ago, i was you know what? i was looking around for something for a serious project, a serious historical project to work on. i was looking for something new, something that hadn t been done. something that, you know, i could really sink my teeth into. and everything that i saw seemed a little bit on the boring side, or quite frankly, had been done so many times that, you know, i just didn t think i could bring anything new to it. and i happened to be talking to a few of the fellows who were the original rangers in world war ii. and they re tremendous men. they started telling me some stories, as old soldiers often do. among the stories they started telling me were stories about having pulled security for some important meetings. you know, we got chatting. and well, who was there? oh, bradley was there. and they were telling some not
campus and in a lot of ways not only is it coming home, but it s coming home to a much better house than i ever was at. this college has just done so much. once they got rid of me, once they got me off campus, they just improved and improved. and marist truly is one of the great institutions, not only now in the northeast but also in the country. so i really, really am grateful that you could spare the time to host me tonight. four or five years ago, i was you know what? i was looking around for something for a serious project, a serious historical project to work on. i was looking for something new, something that hadn t been done. something that, you know, i could really sink my teeth into. and everything that i saw seemed a little bit on the boring side, or quite frankly, had been done so many times that, you know, i just didn t think i could bring anything new to it. and i happened to be talking to a few of the fellows who were the original rangers in world war ii. and