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The Hobbit Hole VI - And Whither Then? I Cannot Say...
Posted on 01/31/2004 9:52:08 AM PST by ecurbh
Welcome to The Hobbit Hole!
And Whither Then? I Cannot Say...
The Road goes ever on and on
Down from the door where it began.
Now far ahead the Road has gone,
And I must follow, if I can,
Pursuing it with eager feet,
Until it joins some larger way
Where many paths and errands meet.
And whither then? I cannot say.
TOPICS: The Hobbit Hole
KEYWORDS: 00nokeywordsyet; bedtimeteaparty; blacktoastiethingies; braidedhobbitfeet; buriedbodies; cupidsgrinch; enchiladasgreasy; hobbitslikemeat; homemadechair; honesttrinisnaig; imnotdeadyet; ketchupchiliblech; meatandgreet; meatnowtalklater; meatonthemenu; myshoescamehome; nomeatnoservice; novegetarianshere; ruthymissesyouall; ruthymoots; spookystory; steakchickenfried; wheresmybatteries; whoisatthedoor; witchscircle
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To: JenB
Morning Jen!! :-)
To: Ramius
(((Ramius)))
Don't know what else to say. Knew this was bad. Just didn't know how bad it could get did we? All the things I was concerned about - and then it turns out to be a whole different circumstance. :-(
I wish I could give you a good back-scratchin' while you have your turkey tonight. You'll just have to settle for the sentiments. :-(
13,382
posted on
03/09/2004 8:01:08 PM PST
by
Wneighbor
(Well the view looks better from ahead than it looks behind)
To: Ramius
That's ghastly. Whose idea was it to advertise for the guy's job before he was fired? Is there anybody naturally that clueless, or do they have to work at it? Besides being inhumane and utterly professional, it was stupid.
13,383
posted on
03/09/2004 8:10:59 PM PST
by
300winmag
(FR's Hobbit Hole supports America's troops)
To: 300winmag
... utterly UNprofessional... (Unless that's what they teach in HR school today).
13,384
posted on
03/09/2004 8:12:27 PM PST
by
300winmag
(FR's Hobbit Hole supports America's troops)
To: Ramius
Was that a pre-emptive "Good morning"?--LOL!
To: Wneighbor; RosieCotton; Fedora
Collin county has:
Registered Voters 332233 - Cards Cast 6679.
We were talking about civic duty this morning in the Hole. Think this kinda backs up my theory on the current apathy from society.
didja vote?
13,386
posted on
03/09/2004 8:25:39 PM PST
by
msdrby
(US Veterans: All give some, but some give all.)
To: msdrby
didja vote?Not in Collin County: I'm in Wisconsin :)
That is a really low voter turnout--wow. How's that compare with statewide?
To: Fedora
I just took a looksee at Tarrant county, seems they faired a little better with a whopping 3% turnout.
13,388
posted on
03/09/2004 8:37:35 PM PST
by
msdrby
(US Veterans: All give some, but some give all.)
To: Fedora
Meant to get back to ya this am re:teaching. I think you are right about the making it relevant and hands on style being able to reach kiddos. It's just that I have seen too many public school kids utterly and completely uninterested in learning of any kind. That is a learned trait BTW. Forces teachers to jump through hoops and get blamed for kids not learning... on the flip side however, much of the history/social studies curriculum has been rehashed, rewritten, and slaughtered to the point where it barely is recognizable as educational material IMO (legislators made it a bunch a PC frap).
Last year, we didn't even use the social studies textbooks to teach what the kids needed to learn. We taught regarding Columbus, the Spanish conquistadors in the New World, The Mayflower, Jamestown, (each of the) Founding Fathers, Revolutionary War, The Louisiana Purchase, national symbols and their significance, and finally Lewis and Clark. We ended the year with a review on public safety and social behavior. The only one of those actually in their text was the whole thing on public safety and social behavior. Guess that is all the state expects from first graders.
13,389
posted on
03/09/2004 8:59:35 PM PST
by
msdrby
(US Veterans: All give some, but some give all.)
To: msdrby
hmm, excuse me for the burp.
13,390
posted on
03/09/2004 9:00:04 PM PST
by
msdrby
(US Veterans: All give some, but some give all.)
To: msdrby
I just took a looksee at Tarrant county, seems they faired a little better with a whopping 3% turnout.Wow! Do you happen to know what the percentage is for an average election? I wonder if it's partly that low because people are assuming Kerry has it sown up.
To: msdrby
Wierd, I posted, and it showed the post twice on my screen. When I refreshed, it was only there once. FR having issues tonight?
13,392
posted on
03/09/2004 9:04:49 PM PST
by
msdrby
(US Veterans: All give some, but some give all.)
To: msdrby
Yeah, kids who don't want to learn is another big part of the problem. I agree it's a learned trait. Hard for teachers to address that without help from the parents. Teachers have a real uphill battle these days.
To: Fedora
Not sure about that one either. Dean got 4% in Collin Co. and Edwards got a whopping 22% in Tarrant Co. I am thinking etiehr people don't realize these candidates have pulled out, or they are protest voting. Either way it does not give reason to low voter turnout. MY guess is that people honestly don't get the reason for having primary elections. Maybe they think it is abotu the Presidential race and that's it?
13,394
posted on
03/09/2004 9:10:07 PM PST
by
msdrby
(US Veterans: All give some, but some give all.)
To: msdrby
Wierd, I posted, and it showed the post twice on my screen. When I refreshed, it was only there once. FR having issues tonight?It only showed up once for me, so I was wondering what you meant by that post about the "burp"--I figured I must've missed something, so I'm glad to hear it wasn't just me, LOL!
To: Fedora
Again, it appears I am the night owl of the family. I am not even close to getting to sleep. Elf-boy and PE went to sleep a long time ago.
13,396
posted on
03/09/2004 9:17:18 PM PST
by
msdrby
(US Veterans: All give some, but some give all.)
To: Fedora
This is a good time to catch up on my Silmarillion. Later.
13,397
posted on
03/09/2004 9:18:15 PM PST
by
msdrby
(US Veterans: All give some, but some give all.)
To: msdrby
Not sure about that one either. Dean got 4% in Collin Co. and Edwards got a whopping 22% in Tarrant Co. I am thinking etiehr people don't realize these candidates have pulled out, or they are protest voting. Either way it does not give reason to low voter turnout. MY guess is that people honestly don't get the reason for having primary elections. Maybe they think it is abotu the Presidential race and that's it?I suspect that's part of it. I can't remember a time in school they ever taught us about the role of the primaries, so I have to imagine a lot of people only learn about it what they hear from the media. It would be interesting to get some hard stats on that, though--I know they do studies of causes of voter apathy, a friend of mine in the PoliSci Department researched stuff like that. I'd be interested to look into that and see what the political analysts are saying about this election's turnout. No doubt there must be some threads on that on FR I've overlooked--anyone got a good link on that?
To: msdrby; All
Have a good one! I'll probably be logging off, too, then. G'night all!
To: Fedora
Well, go pick up Roberta Gellis'
Roselynde series (
Roselynde,
Alinor,
Joanna,
Gilliane,
Rhiannon, and
Sybelle), if it's English knights and medieval swordfights you want. Lots and lots of sieges and jousts and melees; the male characters in these books follow Richard to the Crusades, and John on his interminable kicking-butt tours, and Henry III at the end. The books are highly prized by us readers, and often go on eBay for more than list price; but Harlequin is about to reprint the series, and she's writing a new book for it!!! Hoooooo-wheeee! I'm on pins and needles!
For the Napoleanic Wars, it's Roberta Gellis again, this time the Heiress series and the two add-ons (The English Heiress, The Cornish Heiress, The Kent Heiress, Fortune's Bride, and A Woman's Estate). This series spans the Wars, from the exploits of an English gentleman gunsmith trapped in Revolutionary France (300winmag, what do you know about Lorenzoni quick-loading pistols, circa late 1700s?), to another English gentleman soldier fighting the Corsican in Russia, to the Peninsular War. The Corunna retreat in 1809 is personalized, and if the privations of that forced march don't get you, nothing will. But give A Woman's Estate, which concerns an American woman in England in 1811-1812, a miss if you're looking for good fights --- it's a murder mystery more than anything.
If you like guns and the Old West, pick up Elizabeth Lowell's Reckless Love and her Only series (Only His, Only You, Only Mine, and Only Love). Set in the wild times directly after the Civil War, each book is a snapshot of the various folks who came West, and why. I especially like Reckless Love because of the horses, who are secondary characters.
Sheesh ... and you asked a simple question! I'm sorry ... I get verbose!
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