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Peter Fogel

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RE: Mary Evelyn's Koffee Klatch
12/29/2011 11:25:37 PM
Hi Evelyn,

You know how much I love dogs and when I read this story today I thought your new thread might be a fitting place to post it.

Shalom,

Peter

Taking the lead: The guide dog that helps his blind best friend get around

By Daily Mail Reporter

Last updated at 2:32 PM on 27th December 2011


This pair of pugs are firm friends with a very special relationship - one acting as the eyes of the other.

Franky acts as a guide dog to his fellow pug Elly, helping on walks or to find food and water because she isn't able to find her own way.

The duo, both four years old, are inseparable, with white-coated Elly following Franky everwhere he leads. She sniffs the air to find her friend, the nuzzles into his side to trot along with him.

Special relationship: Elly (top), the blind pug, relies on her best friend Franky (bottom) to help her to find her way around on walks and to get food and water

Special relationship: Elly (top), the blind pug, relies on her best friend Franky (bottom) to help her to find her way around on walks and to get food and water

But their special relationship poses a challenge for RSPCA workers who are trying to find a home for them both together.

Vets nursed the duo back to health after they were found in poor conditions, and hope someone will come forward who is prepared to house them both together.

Elaine Buchan, manager of the RSPCA centre in Newport, South Wales, said: 'This little duo obviously love each other very much.

'Franky is extremely boisterous and playful and Elly is very affectionate and cuddly. He looks out for her and provides support while guiding her on walks or to food or water.

'They both like to partake in doggy delights such as playing with toys and sniffing trees, but it is clear to centre they did not have that life before.'

Best friends: Elly sniffs the air to locate Franky, then nuzzles his side so he can lead the way

Best friends: Elly sniffs the air to locate Franky, then nuzzles his side so he can lead the way

Inseparable: RSPCA workers in Newport, south Wales, hope that someone will come forward who can offer Elly and Franky a home together

Inseparable: RSPCA workers in Newport, south Wales, hope that someone will come forward who can offer Elly and Franky a home together

Both Franky and Elly need operations before they can be rehomed, but their vets are confident that the dogs will be a delight to anyone willing to take them in.

Mrs Buchan added: 'There's absolutely no option of homing them separately as it would break their hearts and also be wholly impractical.

'They're great little dogs and I'm already jealous of the lucky owner who will get to care for such a loving pair.'

Peter Fogel
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RE: Mary Evelyn's Koffee Klatch
12/30/2011 3:52:51 AM

Peter what a fantastic, heart warming story. Now this is what is called unconditional love. :) Thanks ever so much for sharing this.

Quote:
Hi Evelyn,

You know how much I love dogs and when I read this story today I thought your new thread might be a fitting place to post it.

Shalom,

Peter

Taking the lead: The guide dog that helps his blind best friend get around

By Daily Mail Reporter

Last updated at 2:32 PM on 27th December 2011


This pair of pugs are firm friends with a very special relationship - one acting as the eyes of the other.

Franky acts as a guide dog to his fellow pug Elly, helping on walks or to find food and water because she isn't able to find her own way.

The duo, both four years old, are inseparable, with white-coated Elly following Franky everwhere he leads. She sniffs the air to find her friend, the nuzzles into his side to trot along with him.

Special relationship: Elly (top), the blind pug, relies on her best friend Franky (bottom) to help her to find her way around on walks and to get food and water

Special relationship: Elly (top), the blind pug, relies on her best friend Franky (bottom) to help her to find her way around on walks and to get food and water

But their special relationship poses a challenge for RSPCA workers who are trying to find a home for them both together.

Vets nursed the duo back to health after they were found in poor conditions, and hope someone will come forward who is prepared to house them both together.

Elaine Buchan, manager of the RSPCA centre in Newport, South Wales, said: 'This little duo obviously love each other very much.

'Franky is extremely boisterous and playful and Elly is very affectionate and cuddly. He looks out for her and provides support while guiding her on walks or to food or water.

'They both like to partake in doggy delights such as playing with toys and sniffing trees, but it is clear to centre they did not have that life before.'

Best friends: Elly sniffs the air to locate Franky, then nuzzles his side so he can lead the way

Best friends: Elly sniffs the air to locate Franky, then nuzzles his side so he can lead the way

Inseparable: RSPCA workers in Newport, south Wales, hope that someone will come forward who can offer Elly and Franky a home together

Inseparable: RSPCA workers in Newport, south Wales, hope that someone will come forward who can offer Elly and Franky a home together

Both Franky and Elly need operations before they can be rehomed, but their vets are confident that the dogs will be a delight to anyone willing to take them in.

Mrs Buchan added: 'There's absolutely no option of homing them separately as it would break their hearts and also be wholly impractical.

'They're great little dogs and I'm already jealous of the lucky owner who will get to care for such a loving pair.'

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RE: Mary Evelyn's Koffee Klatch
12/30/2011 4:12:19 AM

Hi friends, what a coincidence this article by Alan Caruba is. Just a couple of days ago a good friend and I had a discussion on just this topic and I told my friend about going to our small town library when I was in high school and checking out books to read. Even though I lived in the county the high school was in town and we had to ride a bus to and from school. Well my route was the second run in the afternoon and we had about an hours wait for the bus to return from the first run of delivering students back home. The library was about four blocks from the high school and I would walk there and check out books to take home to read, not only for myself but for my brothers and sisters too. I was the oldest of the bunch. In the four years I attended high school I eventually ran out of anything to read, as our library was very small. I would read a lot of books in a week and sometimes one a day, if it wasn't too long. So when I opened my daily email from the Canada Free Press this article really resonated with me. Oh what precious memories. :) To this day I still love to read. Hope everyone enjoys this.

Keep a book at hand. Some of them will become lifelong companions

The Magical Mental Exercise Called Reading

- Alan Caruba Wednesday, December 28, 2011

In 1942 my parents purchased a home in a picture-postcard suburban New Jersey community and the first improvement they made was to have bookshelves installed on the rear wall of the living room along with more in one corner. They had brought a lot of books with them and anticipated reading many more.

The living room was a library. An indelible memory of mine was of both parents reading. My father was a graduate of New York University, having worked his way through while attending night school. Mother occasionally lamented not having attended college, but Mother also taught in the adult school of the community for three decades and authored two books in addition to many magazine columns.

An authority on haute cuisine and wine, she garnered honors from the British and French Sommelier Societies, as well as from Germany. She was profiled in The New York Times. The word for a person like Mother is autodidact; a fancy way of saying self-taught.

Earlier and well into the 1930s through the 1950s Americans devoured books and often spent precious dollars to purchase sets of the Harvard Classics—we had them—and either the Encyclopedia Britannica or Americana—we had the latter. The Book of the Month Club was very successful as was a magazine called Reader’s Digest.

I was reminded of this by a very entertaining new book, “Blue Collar Intellectuals: When the Enlightened and the Everyman Elevated America”, authored by Daniel J. Flynn. The introduction begins with a reflection on popular culture, “Stupid is the new smart”

This isn’t, however, just another lament about the sad state of present-day education or popular culture. Instead, it is a look back at America in the pre-World War Two era up to and beyond when television began to occupy the time many used to devote to reading books. Ironically, Flynn notes that television played a powerful role in popularizing several of the people he identifies as intellectual icons.

“For much of the twentieth century,” wrote Flynn, “there was a concerted effort among intellectuals to spread knowledge and wisdom far and wide. Correspondingly, many regular people took full advantage of the great educational effort. The idea was that America depended on having a well-rounded, educated citizenry.” This was not a new idea because from its earliest years Americans valued knowledge for its own sake.

“Twentieth-century America witnessed a democratization of education, unparalleled in human history,”says Flynn. I mentioned that my Mother taught gourmet cooking in adult schools. This was a phenomenon that began after World War Two. In addition to the GI bill that encouraged returning servicemen, mostly still young, to attend college, adult schools sprang up in communities as a way to quench the thirst for knowledge among the parents of those in college who, because of the Depression and the war, had not had the opportunity to acquire a higher level of education.

Common among the intellectual icons that Flynn identifies as having made learning popular was that all of them came from humble, often hardscrabble beginnings. They were not the children of wealth and privilege. They were people who knew what it meant to work for meager wages, but yearn for great achievement. All were denizens of local libraries and veracious readers. Of those who became members of the faculties of distinguished institutions, their roots gave them a unique advantage whether the topic was history, economics, or literature. They had lived in the real world.

The “blue collar intellectuals” included Will and Ariel Durant, co-authors of “The Story of Civilization” that included eleven-volumes by the time they were completed. Another was Mortimer Adler who authored “The Story of Philosophy” and, in 1940, “How to Read a Book” which became the second best-selling book of that year.

Milton Friedman transformed economics while teaching at the University of Chicago for thirty years starting in 1946. He would win a Nobel Prize. “Friedman understood that economics wasn’t merely about numbers. It was about people.” His book, “Capitalism and Freedom”, challenged many of the New Deal liberal policies when published in 1962. As Flynn put it, the book “highlighted the disconnect between the intentions of do-gooders and the atrocious results of their deeds.”

I can still recall reading Eric Hoffer’s “The True Believer” some years after it was first published in 1951. Working as a longshoreman, a strike in 1946 gave Hoffer the time to begin writing the book and another in 1948 gave him the time to finish it. It has never gone out of print and it took the reclusive Hoffer from a modest life he greatly preferred to meeting with presidents. The book was about mass movements and was his response to the two worst of the last century, Communism and Nazism. His own lifetime of reading is reflected in this and other books he subsequently wrote.

Flynn ends with a look at Ray Bradbury, best remembered as a science-fiction writer, but like the others of a humble origin, beginning in Waukegan, Illinois in 1920. His books, “Fahrenheit 451”, “Something Wicked Comes This Way”, and “The Martian Chronicles” cemented his reputation. Flynn says that “the threat to the life of the mind comes not as much from people who burn books as from people who don’t read them.”

So, when you’re commuting to work, on a lunch break, or when a hundred or more television channels offer you nothing worth watching keep a book at hand. Some of them will become lifelong companions.

Editor’s note: To keep up with the latest in non-fiction and fiction, visit Caruba’s monthly report at Bookviews.com

© Alan Caruba, 2011

http://www.canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/43549?utm_source=CFP+Mailout&utm_campaign=aa2338dcc0-Call_to_Champions&utm_medium=email

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Michael Caron

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RE: Mary Evelyn's Koffee Klatch
12/30/2011 6:26:19 AM
10_1_136.gifReading is an interesting topic. When I began school, I was seted at the back of the class. I did not know it at the time, but I had a hearing problem. I ultimately did not pass the first year. When I would have an earache, my mother would scrape the inside of my ear with a bobbie pin saying that it would hurt a little, but that's all right. I was also held back in the fourth grade. Sitting in the back of the class. I might as well have been sitting on the dock of the bay. I would read the book in front of me rather than listen to the teacher, because I couldn't hear her anyway. One quick example. In the fourth grade we were given a math assignment. We were to do all the problems on page seven. As I had at times an echo in my ear, I heard page seventy. Page seven was two column addition while page seventy was four column mathe. I struggled, but when I turned in my math assignment I got an A+. I had every answer correct. Under that I received a big red O for failing to listen. When I showed my mother the paper, she told me that I was stupid because I didn't listen. I had asked my teacher on several occasions if I could sit closer to the front and she said that I did not have special privileges. Eventually, I would take books out of the library and study. I did this for the remainder of time that I was in school. However, I noticed something odd about our History books. The Native Americans were savages and the pilgrims were the good guys. While we were studying Early American History, I decided to check out some books written by Native Americans. As our teacher was explaining that the pilgrims were having a terrible time with some of the savages(Whereupon I said, "Whoa. Who were the savages?") and she said, "Why the Indians of course. They were killing the settlers that were trying to set up their new home." I responded, "Yes, but they were doing that by driving the Indians out of their villages." and she responded, "But they didn't belong there. That was our land." I laughed and replied, "So, as our forefathers travelled from the East Coast all the way to California killing the Indians that would not give up their land, the Indians that fought back were savages. Is that correct?" She smiled and said, "Now you understand."squawarrow.jpgI didn't. Later on that year we were reading about Ely Whitney and the Cotton Gin. I noticed that she had never made reference to his color, even though there was a picture of him in the book. Once again, I raised my hand. She rolled her eyes and said, "Yes Mister Caron, what is it?" I asked, "What color was Ely Whitney?" She droned out her answer, "Ely Whitney was white, which you would have know if you read the book."I laughed and said, "Evidently you didn't read the book or look at his picture. First, why would a white man invent a machine that would make things easier for the slaves to do their job?, and how many white men back then sported an Afro hair style. I don't believe they would have been liked very much by their peers." There were a couple of black students in the class who were the first to start laughing, and then everyone else chimed in. I got up, put my History book on her desk and said, "If you are not going to teach us the truth, I quit." I have always been very adamant on determining what is true and what is not. Sorry that O bored everyone.
GOD BLESS YOU
~Mike~
Michael J. Caron (Mike) TRUTH IN ADVERTISING!! Friends First. Business Later.
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Roger Macdivitt .

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RE: Mary Evelyn's Koffee Klatch
12/30/2011 7:56:28 AM

Mike,

Yours is a great story.

My grandaughter suffered the same problem for her first two years at school.

When she was diagnosed she had grommits put into her ear and now she is fine.

Wow, I'm proud of you for standing up to be counted. There are so many things that are poorly taught or distort the truth.

Our history in the UK is slanted in favour of the OLD EDMPIRE whereas American geography is lacking in it's teaching about the real world outside of the USA. Yours is such a big country that there is a tendency to think that it's the world.

To find winter sun we HAVE to travel abroad so it encourages at least European travel.

None of has got it right though.

Roger

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