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            <title>Anyone remember this St. Patrick&#039;s Day Poem? - PS 164 Alumni</title>
            <link rel="self" href="http://www.ps164alumni.net/forum/topics/anyone-remember-this-st?feed=yes&amp;xn_auth=no"/>
            <updated>2016-12-03T07:38:13Z</updated>
                        <id>http://www.ps164alumni.net/forum/topics/anyone-remember-this-st?feed=yes&amp;xn_auth=no</id>
                            <entry>
                    <title>did not have Mrs. Simon but t…</title>
                    <link rel="alternate" href="http://www.ps164alumni.net/xn/detail/1978143:Comment:24395"/>
                                        <id>tag:www.ps164alumni.net,2009-03-17:1978143:Comment:24395</id>
                                        <updated>2009-03-17T15:50:47.334Z</updated>
                    
                                            <author>
                            <name>Peter Monroe</name>
                            <uri>http://www.ps164alumni.net/profile/PeterMonroe</uri>
                        </author>
                    
                    <summary type="html">
                        did not have Mrs. Simon but that is a funny memory. slightly off-topic i remember in 6th grade/Mr. Gulkin we were making out Father&#039;s Day cards. there was a kid in the class whose father was not alive and Mr. Gulkin, being a sensitive teacher (unlike, say Mrs. Berkoff or Mrs. Goldman) said &quot;you can make a card out to your father OR your mother.&quot; some kids incredulously replied &quot;a card for your mother on FATHER&#039;S day?&quot; Mr. Gulkin, deflecting attention toward Barry Wertheim, said &quot;oh, it could…                    </summary>

                                            <content type="html">
                            did not have Mrs. Simon but that is a funny memory. slightly off-topic i remember in 6th grade/Mr. Gulkin we were making out Father&#039;s Day cards. there was a kid in the class whose father was not alive and Mr. Gulkin, being a sensitive teacher (unlike, say Mrs. Berkoff or Mrs. Goldman) said &quot;you can make a card out to your father OR your mother.&quot; some kids incredulously replied &quot;a card for your mother on FATHER&#039;S day?&quot; Mr. Gulkin, deflecting attention toward Barry Wertheim, said &quot;oh, it could just be either parent, even though it&#039;s Father&#039;s Day.&quot;                        </content>
                    
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