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The Monday Morning Memo

The BeagleSword was halfwit existentialist
and the rabbit hole was the magnum opus
of all things Celtic.

See the guy in the blue and white striped shirt?
That’s Dr. Jeff Spencer. He had to step out of class several times last
week to take emergency calls from a dozen different coaches
at the Olympics in London who needed his immediate advice.
Jeff has counseled and guided more than 40 Olympic champions,
National Champions and World Champions in a wide variety of sports.
His specialty is Personal Performance Crisis Resolution.
Interestingly, he was in the class as a student, not as a teacher.

The world’s most interesting people gather at Wizard Academy.

 

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Random Quote:

“Tom Wolfe has also enjoyed a measure of success as a novelist, although his fiction suffers from the very characteristics that made his sixties and seventies journalism so vital; his flawless ear for jargon and meticulous eye for detail. His approach to fiction, he has admitted, is that of the nineteenth-century novelists, which implies a verbatim translation of life, but as W. Somerset Maugham once put it, ‘Realism too often produces novels that are drab and dull.’ going on to asset that the fiction that really matters is make-believe, dealing not in truths per se but in effects.”

- Tom Robbins, Tibetan Peach Pie, p. 94

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