User:JanuaryThunder: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Sadness.jpg|thumb|left|100px|A jubilant JanuaryThunder, photographed after being nominated for the ''Marcus Garvey Prize for Human Rights'' in 1964. JanuaryThunder is the second-youngest recipient of the prestigious ''MGPfHR'' as of May 13, 2011.]]
[[File:Why.jpg|thumb|right|150px|JanuaryThunder with close friend and civil rights activist Michael Brooks in Michigan during the 1968 ''Shout Out! Rally Against Racism'' tour. Michael Brooks tragically died of arterial thrombosis on June 7, 2009 at the age of 82.]]
[[File:Sorrow.jpg|thumb|right|150px|JanuaryThunder and his wife celebrating their twelfth anniversary at the Emerald Lake Lodge in California in 1975.]]
[[File:ExistentialCrisis.jpg|thumb|left|200px|JanuaryThunder being interviewed on ''Bill Moyers Journal'' in 1980.]]
[[File:Futility.jpg|thumb|right|200px|JanuaryThunder pictured with his favorite pipe, which he received from the chief of a Miskito Indian tribe during a speaking tour in Nicaragua in 1962.]]
[[File:Dust.jpg|thumb|left|300px|JanuaryThunder, representing the city of Spokane, participates in a 1997 marathon held in Wonju, South Korea.]]
'''Jonathan "JanuaryThunder" Townley''' is a former associate professor of sociology at Princeton University and author of several books on popular culture and demography. Outside of academia, he is also a prominent activist and speaker.
'''Jonathan "JanuaryThunder" Townley''' is a former associate professor of sociology at Princeton University and author of several books on popular culture and demography. Outside of academia, he is also a prominent activist and speaker.



Revision as of 03:43, July 26, 2011

Jonathan "JanuaryThunder" Townley is a former associate professor of sociology at Princeton University and author of several books on popular culture and demography. Outside of academia, he is also a prominent activist and speaker.

Jonathan Townley was born into a modest, working class household in Spokane, Washington in 1942. There, he learned the virtues of hard work, family, and community. During the winter of 1953, he witnessed a frightening storm, during which lightning struck and fell a tree which had been in his family's care for generations. It was from this event he derived the pseudonym "JanuaryThunder". In second school and in university, he published subversive articles in his local newspapers under this alias.

He has been described by his colleagues as "an unrepentant scholar", "a beacon of wisdom and hope", and "perhaps the greatest living genius of our time". Unfortunately, many of Jonathan Townley's groundbreaking academic dissertations were destroyed in a fire which consumed the eastern portion of the previous Washington State Public Archives building in 1962.

According to the Carnegie Institution for Science, his Intelligence Quotient has been estimated to be as high as 187. Despite this, he has rejected several offers from Mensa International and International Society for Philosophical Enquiry, calling them "bastions of elitism".

Nowadays, Jonathan Townley can be found spending long hours editing collaborative encyclopedias, including Wikipedia, Super Mario Wiki, Citizendium, and Jurispedia. He has also found hobbies in musical composition and recreational programming.