October 18, 2014

FIFTH GRADER SOLVES THE EDUCATION FINANCE CRISIS

Sara Bellum, my daughter's best friend, stayed for supper at our house the other night.

To say Sara is precocious would be the ultimate understatement.  She's so smart she makes Albert Einstein seem like a pea brain.  And well-read, too!  According to her fifth grade teacher, Sara's the only kid in the history of the school who ever gave a book report on the entire ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA.

"I think I've got things figured out." Sara announced to my husband between bites of meatloaf.

"Got what figured out?"  Dave shot back before I could send him a warning glare.

"How to resolve the education dollar crisis.  The legislature, as you know, is traditionally tightfisted when it comes to appropriating education dollars."

Dave's lower jaw dropped.  As a veteran school teacher, he was ready to take the bait.  Sara had him chummed.

"Pass the corn and tell me more," was what he said.

"Well," Sara smeared a slice of bread with grape preserves, "first of all, you resume selling canned pop in all the lunch rooms across the state and encourage the school district to sell the scrap aluminum cans to supplement teacher salaries.


"Then, you collect all the pencil sharpener shavings in each school and recycle them into paper school supplies.


"Finally, you take all the onions out of the school lunch salads--the kids never eat them anyway--and use the money you save to buy new text books.


 "Why those three measures alone should save the state's taxpayers millions of education dollars."

"I see," my husband said, so obviously intrigued that he had begun chewing on his Jello.

"You recycle the aluminum cans, and you recycle the pencil shavings.  But what about the onions?  What are all the farmers in Utah going to do with their surplus onions?"

"Give them to the legislature," Sara replied.  "That way, next time they talk about the problems in education they can cry some real tears."

October 8, 2014

HALLOWEEN'S A MONSTER



One Halloween, Mother turned the rag bag inside out, holding up for my inspection the lint-flecked navy wool from Daddy’s sailor days and the rhinestone-sprinkled circle skirt she’d worn ten years before on New Year’s Eve.

I finally settled for a gaudy, paisley shift, cinched tight around the middle with a flamboyant silk scarf. A knotted string of cut-glass beads and a pair of clinking Mason jar rings dangling from one ear made me a fairly authentic gypsy, Mama said.

I stood patiently as she rubbed my cheeks with lipstick over cold cream, taking care to feather out the edges, before adding an eyebrow-penciled beauty mark for good luck.

That was then.  Now, I rummage for my own kids’ costumes, but somehow their father’s cast-off baseball jersey and their mom’s satin bridesmaid dress will not do for youngsters set on extorting treats by virtue of their striking similarity to space-age spooks like Darth Vader and E.T.

It was bad enough when Michael hacked my flexible dryer venting hose in two for the arms of the robot he aspired to be.


And I could barely cope when Jennifer dismantled the kitchen stove so she could use the door for the head of her computer creature costume.



But when Stacee left the goldfish in the toilet with a “Do Not Flush” sign, so she could borrow his bowl for her astronaut suit helmet, I was the one who went into orbit.



Moments later, three space-age spooks timidly attempted to break the glassy-eyed silence I maintained.

“What are you going to be for Halloween?” I heard my children ask.

“A basket case,” they heard their mother say!

!
Matt and Mike back in the day when creating a Halloween costume didn't involve dismantling the house.

So this little spook had a bit too much candy!