DR. SEUSS DAY !

SeussHank

 

Theodor Seuss Geisel was born on March 2nd, 1904. He drew the above picture and the picture below was taken in front of the library named after him at UC San Diego. An amazing building:

 

Smiling at Geisel Library UCSD

 

Two links to his art and life

http://www.drseussart.com/bio/

http://www.catinthehat.org/history.htm

A link to the library

http://libraries.ucsd.edu/blogs/blog/seuss-day-2016/

 

My first cherished Seuss book (after Cat In The Hat and its sequels of course, which my sisters had before me) (Oh, and One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish) had to be Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories. Or was it Scrambled Eggs Super? Alls I recall is getting Happy Birthday To You! on my birthday in 1959 was a revelation. And it still makes a fun birthday gift for adults. My all-time favorite Seuss might be McEllligot’s Pool because it taught me your imagination can save you.  Reading The Sneetches and Other Stories I learned about race, fear, tolerance, the dark side of stubbornness, and not to conform to the money-making machinery scams of Sylvester McMonkey McBean. Thidwick the Big-Hearted Moose was supreme kindness and strength, the above-mentioned Yertle taught me to rebel against authoritarian tyrants, and The King’s Stilts  and The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins were just darn clownish fun (plus there was a sequel where Bartholomew had to deal with a yucky Oobleck).

Come to think of it, I was raised so much on Seuss I ended up living on Mulberry Street in New York.

Here’s a great site where his books fly by for the picking:

http://www.seussville.com/books/book_detail.php?isbn=9780394800837

 

Roosevelt Kids 3003

Okay kids until next time, enjoy this analysis of Sneetches

http://www.umich.edu/~childlit/Sneetches/display1.htm

 

BONUS!

Radio essay I did in Pasadena comparing The Lorax with James Cameron’s movie Avatar

http://www.scpr.org/programs/offramp/2010/02/27/10140/commentator-hank-rosenfeld-on-avatar-dr-suess-was-/

 

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Good Humor Man

 Puns Are Vulgar

Well!

The summer in Michigan I drove a Good Humor ice cream truck I approached every customer as if I were The Good Humor man. Being on and playful every block I drove, from East Detroit all the way to St. Clair Shores. Was I living a pun? Better than living a lie, I guess. I was held up and robbed, my truck was attacked — but still I remained in a goodly humor. Best as I could, despite all.

The above Pun Passage is from a book published in 1901 called, “Twentieth Century Etiquette,  An Up-To-Date Book For Polite Society” by Annie Randall White. http://www.amazon.com/Twentieth-century-etiquette-up-date/dp/B00088XFZQ

I think puns give us another opportunity to present words in a fun way in conversation. Especially when talking with younger folk. Puns are one shout out at creating a space for kids to join in and play.

 

Roosevelt Kids 3003

I asked the Dalai Lama why Buddhists giggle so much and he said what I like about laughter is when people laugh they can have new ideas. Because creativity is allied to relaxation and that’s allied to play.  John Cleese

 

“Engine Engine Number 9

Going down Chicago line

If the train runs off the track

Do you want your money back?”

Do you remember this? Was it a mantra chanted only amongst us kids in the Midwest?  Because there, in the heart of northwest Detroit, it was known. Many a game featured it up top, to kickoff the backyard activity.

Words like this, employed to pick-and-choose fellow humans for our social games go deep. What’s more social than choosing up sides or more important to learn than, Who goes next? Who’s going now? Taking turns prepared kids for the exchange involved in conversing. Wherever our choice landed was followed by the question: Do you want your money back?

Whomever that fickle finger of fate* pointed to, then responded: “Yes” or “No.” And counting off each syllable, “N…O…” landed you from person to person. All to see who gets picked to go next, to play, to speak, to run and hide or seek.

As we live, so do we sing.

Allen Lomax

The chanting of songs as the social media of its day, greasing the wheels of the circle as we included and excluded each other by simply counting.  (NOTE TO those still suffering from APLS— Always Picked Last Syndrome –you might consult the “Left Out” series of tomes.)

Thinking back, which friend came up with those chants?

How are schoolyard expressions invented?

My favorite got recited during every touch football tilt. Before you were allowed to rush the quarterback you had to chant:

 

One Mississippi, two Mississippi…”

or

“One dog, two dog three dog…”

Or

“One one-thousand, two one-thousand, three one-thousand…”

 

Sometimes we’d go as high as ten Mississippis!

Think about that. It’s not like years later, when adults sit and try to come up with an idea. Kids are constantly creating. Ideas never stop flowing. The creativity flows from play, the ideas from creating. Kids don’t sit and think, Darn it I need a new idea. Children are constantly discovering them. It seems to have been so easy then, but so difficult to come up with brilliance like that as adults. Who plays like that anymore?

Speaking of play and players, former footballer for the NY Giants, Michael Strahan has a new book out called “Wake Up Happy.”

http://www.amazon.com/Wake-Up-Happy-Dream-Transforming/dp/1476775680

The great guru Paul Sills of Second City once told us in class, “When you watch children play, the engaging harmony you see is very close to faith.”

This line came to me in a dream one night: There is so much love in the love of play.

SeussHank

 

Back Pocket Banter (Things a folk journalist introduces to the conversation)

Are there songs you recall from school playgrounds while growing up?

What kind of games did you play as a child?

Play any games with family members in the car? * *

What’s the best family trip you ever went on?

Where would you like to drive today if we could go anywhere?

BONUS!

Discuss your favorite kind of car, your favorite thing in the car, favorite radio station, or songs to sing along the road.

What do you imagine it would be like to ride in a driverless car? Would you want to take a nap during the commute?

If you could change the traffic laws, what rule would you have?

Tell a story you would like to tell in a car, or one that you heard in a car.

 

*  Fickle Finger of Fate refers to the “Laugh In” a comedy TV show (dates TK)

**  “I spy something….” (adding the color of a house, street sign, cloud)

 

Roosevelt teach 3005

 

Link to a folk journalist with 4th graders, asking about their latest literary achievements.

http://www.scpr.org/programs/offramp/2009/10/31/2099/kids-read-the-darndest-things-hank-rosenfeld-disco/

 

It is not what is said that is important; it is what has been received.

Christabel Burniston, British pioneer in oral communication

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