Rich, thanks for making sure Erik's posts came through. Funny because I was getting them as recently as a few days ago. I think the key to what Bishop wrote (Observer's Handbook 2009 edition, pg. 309, "Expired Stars") and my recollections, is that Sirius B and Omicron 2 Eridani B are the only white-dwarves *easily seen with a small telescope. *You're not going to see the central star in M57 from your backyard with a 6-inch Newtonian, nor are you going to find the companions of cataclysmic variables with a similar set-up. These two are also very close, as such things go. Om 2 Eri B is only 16.5 light-years distant, Sirius B is what, 8.5? These objects are virtually in our own "back yard". And Om 2 Eri B has the advantage of not rubbing shoulders with the second-brightest star in Earth's sky- it's much more easily seen in the eyepiece. It's a good star-party target that is easily found. "Who wants to see a dead star, one that no longer glows from nuclear fusion?!" I sure would if I were a jr. high kid interested in science. That only leaves the definition of a "small telescope" as grist for the nit-picker's mill.