Archive for February, 2003

Feb 28 2003

Remembering a good neighbor

Published by Mary under Uncategorized

We’ll miss you Mr. Rogers

[NEWSMAX.COM]
Sad Day in the Neighborhood: TV’s Beloved Mr. Rogers Dies

NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, Feb. 28, 2003
PITTSBURGH � Fred Rogers, who delivered life’s lessons to children for more than 30 years in quiet soothing tones, dies Thursday of stomach cancer at age 74.
Rogers, an ordained Presbyterian minister who became one of the most recognizable and beloved figures on television, was the host of “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” on PBS from 1968-2000.
Rogers opened every program of “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” with a gentle song, written by him, asking the viewer “Won’t you be my neighbor?” as he donned a sweater and sneakers. His easy manners, gentle conversation, puppet plays and soothing songs dealt with matters as crucial to a child as a dentist appointment, a death in the family or even the complexities of the Gulf War.
Typically, as the first anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks neared, Rogers, even though he had stopped making episodes of “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood,” offered advice for parents handling children’s questions about the events. “Our mission has always been to help families grow in healthy, nurturing ways, and now more than ever, we hope our messages can be of services to you,” he wrote.
“Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” grew from 15-minute programs produced in Toronto begun in 1963 into the 30-minute style that survived from 1967 until its final original episode in December 2000. PBS distributed original episodes of the program to as many as 300 stations from 1968-2001.
His messages were often delivered in puppet shows and in skits performed after taking his viewers on a trolley ride to the Neighborhood of Make-Believe.
TV Ministry … on PBS!
Careful never to call his programs “shows,” Rogers maintained he was doing minister’s work to a congregation of children through television. He wrote every script and each song.
He was not an actor, he said, although he was the voice of an entire cast of puppets and chatted easily with popular actors and performers who were guests in the neighborhood.
No matter what Rogers chose as the subject for each program’s theme, the overriding message coming from “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood” was always to same: “You are special. You are worthwhile, no matter what you are on the outside. Your insides are what matter.”

A Beautiful Day

In 1992, nearly 25 years after he began his programs, Rogers was scheduled to give an invocation to graduates at Boston University, where his appearance was met by cheers, whistles and shouts of welcome from the 5,400 students who immediately recognized Rogers as their very first teacher.
Flustered momentarily by the din, Rogers was unable to offer the invocation. He spoke quietly into the microphone, asking “Will you sing with me?”
“It’s a beautiful day in the neighborhood, …” he began, singing the familiar words of his theme song. In a minute, the audience joined him, linking arms throughout the entire stadium, singing the song they learned by heart when they were visitors to “Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood.” “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood was a low-key series that took place primarily on a set that represented Mr. Rogers’ home. There, after introducing himself by singing his opening song, Rogers would take a comfortable sweater, the original of which is on display at the Smithsonian Institution, from his closet and deal with matters that likely were of concern to children up at age 5 that could be as common as nightfall, or, as he did in 1992, as complex as the Gulf War.
Rogers planned to be a musician and was interested in the ministry after he graduated in 1951 from Rollins College with a degree in music. Instead he went into the fledgling television industry. He worked his way up to floor manager for such pioneering network programs as “Your Lucky Strike Hit Parade” and “The Kate Smith Show.”
Two years later, Rogers quit his job to join a Pittsburgh public television station. He told his superiors, “Something tells me that’s what I’m supposed to do.”
At WQED-TV, Rogers hosted a 15-minute program produced for Canadian Broadcasting Corp., called “Misterogers,” the prototype of “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood.”
He enrolled at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, where his education included training in child psychology at Pittsburgh’s Arsenal Family and Children Center, the famed child development center founded by Dr. Benjamin Spock.
Blending his child training, his ministerial teaching and his beloved music, Rogers wrote and produced “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood,” targeted for children between 2 and 5. The program was hailed by educators and television analysts as perhaps the healthiest fare for children on TV. They cited the program’s unique ability to enroll its audiences in imaginative play.

Back by Popular Demand

When Rogers suspended production of the program after eight seasons because he thought he had covered every possible theme, he was inundated with overwhelming demand from the public, as well as the television and educational communities. He brought the program back in 1979.
Fred McFeeley Rogers was born March 20, 1928, in Latrobe, a small industrial town in western Pennsylvania, the son of a wealthy brick maker James Hill and Nancy Rogers.
He married concert pianist Sara Joanne Byrd on July 9, 1952, and had two children.

‘I Like You Just the Way You Are’

Rogers was an only child. Because he was sickly, he was confined to a specially air-conditioned room. His only childhood “friend” was his grandfather, Fred McFeeley, for whom he was named, who amused the boy with things to do or to look at and who said to him one day: “You know, you made this day a really special day. Just by being yourself. There’s only one person in the world like you. And I happen to like you just the way you are.”
Years later, Fred McFeeley would be a character in “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood.” The profound message his grandfather told him as a child would be the theme upon which Rogers would base his program.
Among Rogers’ numerous awards are Emmy nominations in 1968 and 1969 and Emmy Awards in 1980 and 1985, the George Foster Peabody Radio and Television Award from the University of Georgia, and a National Educational Television Award for Excellence in Children’s Programming in 1985.

Reproduced with the permission of NewsMax.com. All rights reserved.

[About Mr. Rogers]
[UPI article]

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Feb 25 2003

Tuesday coffee break

Published by Mary under Uncategorized

Good Morning! I am sitting here sipping my coffee getting ready to take on another day. It is still quiet around here even though it is getting to be pretty late in the morning. Some mornings I love letting the kids sleep in. But I know for sure that it will mean a little bit more energy on my part in the evening to get them all back into bed at the regular bedtime as they will all be rested and not tired one tiny bit. But this morning the sun is shining and the coffee is hot and I may just let them sleep a little longer.

I need to psych myself up for today. As you may know if you are a regular visitor we have started a work out program here. A couple of weeks ago I slipped into my bathing suit and, while I am happy with myself, there is still just a little too much of me to love right now. So, I am working out and trying to eat right and get ready for soccer season. Yesterday was a good day - at least until 9pm. I was on track all day and even had a Healthy Choice microwave dinner for dinner. Then, after getting the kids in bed, I went back downstairs to do some work on the computer. This is a routine. What is not a routine is having Oreo cookies in the house.

Oreo cookies with half coffee / half cream. I can barely even talk about this. Oh my goodness. I love coffee and usually I am safe with coffee flavored food because there is really very little connection with the part of my brain that loves coffee. But Oreo coffee and cream cookies are like a crunchy burst of sweet cafe latte. They aren’t just good they are decadent. So, last night at 9pm and several cookies later, I went back to work.

So, I’m sitting here getting psyched for the day with the knowledge there are still coffee and cream cookies in the bread box. Be stong.

Well, there are now pitter patter of footsteps coming down the stairs, so whether I’m ready or not here we go.

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Feb 24 2003

Please say Please

Published by Mary under Uncategorized

This morning during my coffee break I am wondering how important is sometimes to insist that a toddler or small child learn to say “Please”. Right now I am being treated to the sobs of a 6 year old who doesn’t want to say please to her older brother to help her with breakfast. He seems to be insistant on her saying please.
So, I am sitting here sipping my coffee wondering
1. Do I jump in?
2. Should I let them resolve this themselves?
3. Do I insist she learns to appreciate the power of the word “please” or
4. Do I just sit back and enjoy this cup of coffee and savor in the wonderful sounds of young children in the house.
After all, every older parent I have ever talked to has told me to enjoy these moments because they fly by……

Ah, silence. Someone in the kitchen has conceded. Now there is only chatter. Wait, there was almost a giggle.

Well, thanks for joining me for this coffee break.

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Feb 23 2003

This is why we had kids right?

Published by Mary under Uncategorized

Today was a fun day but I can barely even type in this coffee break moment because my body is tired. Not just my legs, not just my arms, but my entire body. Even my eyeballs are tired.

Today was a fun day because we spent the morning outside with the kids playing in the snow - laughing, playing, rolling in the snow - the whole works. It was great. I was glad to be able to keep up with the kids (at least for the most part) but it was a good reminder that I am in no way close to being in shape enough to keep up with them this summer when the activities are soccer and bicycling.

So, I am sitting here with my warm cup of coffee now thinking about how to get into shape before soccer season. My plan is to work out at least 15 minutes everyday - this is not so extraordinary but I am sure it will help because it is about 12 - 14 minutes more than I am working out right now.

So, with every tired moment from now until soccer season I will remember this is just one of the reasons we wanted to have kids.

What are some of the things you love most about having kids. Let us know in the Discussion Board.

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