Wednesday, September 25, 2013 
 
 
       
  
[1897 - William Cuthbert Faulkner (Falkner), Nobel Prize-winning writer, novelist, born in New Albany, Mississippi] 
 
  
[1905 - Red (Walter) Smith, Pulitzer Prize- winning sportswriter, born in Green Bay, Wisconsin] 
 
 
       
  
[1906 - Dmitri Dmitriyevich Shostakovich, composer, born in St. Petersburg, Russia] 
 
 
       
  
[1917 - Phil (Philip Francis) 'Scooter' Rizzuto, Hall of Fame Yankee shortstop, born in Brooklyn] 
 
 
     
[1926 - Aldo Ray (DaRe), actor, born in Pen Argyl, Pennsylvania] 
 
         
  
[1930 - Sheldon Alan 'Shel' Silverstein, poet, cartoonist, singer, songwriter, born in Chicago] 
 
 
       
    
  
[1932 - Glenn (Herbert) Gould, piano virtuoso, born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada] 
 
 
     
[1933 - Erik Darling, folk singer & songwriter, born in Baltimore, Maryland] 
 
 
       
  
[1936 - Juliet Prowse, dancer, actress, born in Bombay, Maharashtra, India] 
 
 
     
[1952 - Christopher Reeve, actor, director, producer, writer, born in New York City] 
 
    
  
[1957 - Nine black students enter Central High School, Little Rock, Arkansas, under the protection of the 101st Airborne Division, US Army] 
 
   
[1981 - Sandra Day O'Connor, first woman on the U.S. Supreme Court, is sworn in] 
  
 Grandpa Moment # 4 - No Limits  
 
Grandpa is reading a bedtime story to grandson (age 3.1).  He notices that the child can already recognize individual words in his train book, so he asks: 
 
Can you read? 
 
No, Grandpa; I can read when I am four. 
 
Don't you think that you could read when you are three? 
 
No, Grandpa, you have to be four. 
 
{Grandpa sees an opportunity to conduct a Socratic dialogue with grandson.} 
 
Do you think you could read in one month? 
 
No, Grandpa. 
 
How about two months? Could you read then? 
 
No Grandpa, I think it would take longer.  
 
How about four months, could you read after that long a time? 
 
Yes, Grandpa. I think I could. 
 
But, Zach, in four months you will still be three. 
 
Oh! 
 
{It would seem that a well-intentioned adult who didn't know him thought to encourage young Zach by telling him he would be able to read when he was four (before he went to kindergarten).  Instead, a barrier had been erected.} 
 
  
 William's Whimsical Words:  
  Take care what you say to children.  
 
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