Wednesday, September 09, 2009

Garrison Keillor hospitalized after minor stroke
Sept. 9, 2009, 4:16 PM EST
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Humorist Garrison Keillor still plans to start his new season of "A Prairie Home Companion" as scheduled in just over two weeks, despite suffering a minor stroke.
Keillor had the stroke and was admitted to Saint Marys Hospital at Mayo Clinic, said Karl Oestreich, a spokesman for the Rochester, Minn. facility. He will remain there until Friday for tests "and upon his release will resume his schedule as previously planned," Keillor spokesman David O'Neill said.
"He is up and moving around, speaking sensibly, working at a laptop," Oestreich said in a statement to The Associated Press.
O'Neill said in an e-mail that Keillor "is doing well and the family appreciates the warm wishes."
In a statement, Keillor said he was "feeling ill" on Monday morning and drove himself to United Hospital in St. Paul, where he lives, then was transferred to Mayo "simply because they know so much more about me down there."
Keillor, 67, underwent surgery to repair a heart valve at the Mayo Clinic in 2001.
"I am in the hands of smart and compassionate people and plan to get out on Friday and get right back to work," including the opening of a new season of "A Prairie Home Companion," Keillor said. "And that's the news from here."
Mayo Clinic initially said Keillor was hospitalized Sunday, but Keillor's publicist said it was Monday. Oestreich later confirmed it was Monday.
Keillor is scheduled to open the new season of "A Prairie Home Companion" on Sept. 26 from the Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul.
He celebrated "Prairie Home's" 35th anniversary with a Fourth of July performance before some 10,000 people in Avon, a central Minnesota town that helped inspire his fictional hometown of Lake Wobegon. He performed last Friday night at the Minnesota State Fair.
Some 4 million people listen each week to "A Prairie Home Companion" on nearly 600 public radio stations in the U.S.

In news of my own......first day back, and I find out, (after two years of doing it now,) that the kindergarten teachers in one of my districts are contractually entitled to another set of eyes and ears in the classroom for the first week; I wonder how long they're going to be able to maintain that arrangement. None the less, of course, I'll take what I can get, especially in this economy. All in all, it was a good first day back, especially considering that working with kindergarteners, some of whom might have never been to school before, can be, as someone I know put it, "like herding cats." Truer words were never spoken. But the classroom teacher complemented me on my capacity to keep things moving while she took care of other business, which was heartening. Now if I could just manage to get all my subbing stuff into a container that doesn't end up weighing as much as a Buick......

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