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This is an uplifting and positive true story about a dog who became blind and deaf, and how he coped with the handicap. He did not lose his sweet disposition, become bitter, or afraid. He learned to trust his family to take care of him, watch over him, and others to not take advantage of his handicap. Rather, he used his other faculties to overcome his lack of hearing and sight to conduct a normal warm and friendly dog's life. At the same time, his human family has to learn to adapt too, ensuring his safety and well being. The story line also offers us the opportunity to teach the kids how to…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This is an uplifting and positive true story about a dog who became blind and deaf, and how he coped with the handicap. He did not lose his sweet disposition, become bitter, or afraid. He learned to trust his family to take care of him, watch over him, and others to not take advantage of his handicap. Rather, he used his other faculties to overcome his lack of hearing and sight to conduct a normal warm and friendly dog's life. At the same time, his human family has to learn to adapt too, ensuring his safety and well being. The story line also offers us the opportunity to teach the kids how to explore an event and reach an understanding of it in a systematic way. Two such examples: first with the dog biscuits, and then with the steps leading in and out of the house.
Autorenporträt
Born in Tel Aviv during WWII, Dan Gielan was subjected to the British rule over Palestine, witnessed the establishment of the State of Israel, and lived through the ensuing War of Independence and the 1956 Sinai Campaign. While in high school Dan also attended the Israeli Conservatory and Academy of Music and graduated with a degree in music. Following 3 years of military service in the Armored Corps of the Israeli Defense Forces, he studied at the Technion in Haifa and emerged with a bachelor's degree in Mechanical Engineering. During the Six Day War Dan served as a communications officer for an armored battalion in the Sinai, and in 1968 he came to the United States to pursue an MBA degree at Columbia University in New York. When the Yom Kippur War broke out in 1973 he volunteered to return to Israel and help defend it as a tank platoon commander in the IDF. During his career in the U.S. Dan founded and managed three Information Technology companies, lectured extensively at universities and professional symposia, and was recognized as one of the pioneers of the IT industry. In his previous book "Zero-Zero" (1998) Dan warned of two threats to modern society: our over-reliance on uncontrolled computer systems in all facets of modern existence, and the loss of personal privacy, both of which have come to pass as issues central to our lives today.