throwback thursday

Throwback Thursday: Soccer and microfilm

The inspiration for this week's post came from a tweet.

I read this on Wednesday night, literally laughed out out, immediately retweeted it, and tagged our librarian Deimosa. Her response? "Oh, the microfilm machine. We just got a new one in the Archives. Let's look something up!" (We did a Throwback Thursday post almost exactly one year ago about our old microfilm/microfiche machine; check it out!)

(Here's Deimosa scrolling though some issues of Junior Scholastic from the 60s and 70s. And if you're wondering, that's the ScanPro3000.)

I knew I wanted to find some soccer books and articles to piggyback off the World Cup frenzy (Congrats, France! Awesome job, Croatia!), and luckily, our old classroom magazines are kept both in bound volumes and on microfilm. With nearly 80 years of back issues, there *had* to be some articles about soccer. Here's what we found!

Junior Scholastic
December 1, 1977
"Pele: Brazil's and America's Soccer King" (Scanned with the microfilm machine!)

Junior Scholastic
May 18, 1990
"Word Cup Soccer: The U.S. Kicks In"

Junior Scholastic
May 4, 1978
"Kicking It Around" (Scanned with the microfilm machine!)

By Mark Stewart: The World Cup, 2003 and Briana Scurry, Super Saver, 2000.

Special thanks to Scholastic librarian Deimosa Webber-Bey for her ongoing help with this series!

Throwback Thursday: Amusement parks and carnivals

Happy summer, readers! Summer is probably one of our favorite seasons here at Scholastic, and in previous Throwback Thursday posts, we found books featuring very very summery locations: beaches, and summer camps.

This time around, we looked for books featuring another great place to spend a summer day: an amusement park! (Deimosa and I expanded our search to include carnivals, too.) Going on rides, playing games and eating cotton candy is summer personified to me.

The Girls of Canby Hall (Super Edition): The Almost Summer Carnival by Emily Chase, 1987. 

One strike, and they might be out.

Everyone is working hard on the big annual Almost Summer Carnival when the Canby Hall maintainence crew goes on strike! The headmistress wants to close the school and cancel the carnival, but Toby and Andy persuade her to let the students take over the most essential jobs.

Suddenly, laundry comes back in strange colors and the cafeteria produces even stranger food. But the girls discover unexpected new talents.

Work is piling up and time is short. Can the carnival be saved? The girls of 407 get a totally unexpected answer to their question!

My Sister, the Traitor by Candice F. Ransom, 1988.

Jackie is nearly thirteen. Her older sister, Sharon, is nearly sixteen, and these days, she's been acting almost human. Although they live miles from town, Jackie is hoping she and her sister will have a pretty good summer.

Then a local amusement park opens, and Sharon gets a job. Jackie feels left out, until she discovers Russell, the definitely cute boy who runs the pony rides. But Russell falls for Sharon!

Jackie can't figure it out. How did it happen—again? How did Sharon get everything, leaving Jackie with a big, fat zero?

And what is Jackie going to do about it?

Baby-sitters Little Sister #25: Karen's Carnival by Ann M. Martin, 1991.

Play the ringtoss!

One day, Karen, Hannie, and Nancy are bored, bored, bored. They can't go roller-skating, and the playground is too fair away. So Karen decides to have a carnival, with all kinds of games and prizes!

What will the girls do with the money they make from their carnival? Hannie wants roller skates—but Karen can think of something even better!

Goosebumps #16: One Day at HorrorLand by R.L. Stine, 1994.

The next ride might be their last...

The Morris family got lost trying to find Zoo Gardens Theme Park. But that's okay. They found another amusement park instead. It's called HorrorLand.

In HorrorLand there are no crowds. No lines. And the admission is free. It seems like a pretty cool place.

But that was before that heart-stopping ride on the deadly Doom Slide. And that terrifying experience in the House of Mirrors. 

Because there's something weird about the rides in HorrorLand.

Something a little too creepy.

A little too real...

The Magic School Bus: A Science Chapter Book #5: Twister Trouble, 2000.

Hi, my name's Tim. I'm one of the kids in Ms. Frizzle's class. Maybe you've heard of Ms. Frizzle. She takes on lots of field trips in the Magic School Bus. We never know what's going to happen when we get on that bus, but we do know that we'll learn lots about one of Ms. Frizzle's favorite subjects—science.

When we were studying weather, Ms. Frizzle took us to the Weatherama Theme Park. But the biggest, baddest ride wasn't a roller coaster at all—it was a real tornado. We learned lots of hair-raising facts about these monstrous storms. Get ready for a whirlwind of excitement as the Magic School Bus takes on a twister!

Special thanks to librarian Deimosa Webber-Bey for her ongoing help with this series!

Throwback Thursday: Asian-American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month

May is Asian-American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. It originally began as a weekly celebration (technically, the first 10 days in May) back in 1979, but then was changed to a month-long celebration in 1992.

For this edition of Throwback Thursday, Deimosa and I found a number of books by Asian authors/illustrators, or books featuring Asian characters for all agesranging from folklore to poetry to stories of modern experiencesin the Archives.

Picture Books

Father's Rubber Shoes by Yumi Heo, 1995. (This was originally published by Orchard Books, an imprint that Scholastic would acquire.)

Like many children whose families have moved, Yungsu is unhappy in his new neighborhood. Now his father is busy at his store and Yungsu misses his friends in Korea.

Author/illustrator Heo movingly and subtly reveals the dreams and the traumas of moving to a new land, as seen from a child's perspective. Her simple, poetic text and exuberant collage illustrations suggest  that the little things in this big situation—a story about a father's childhood, a meal of bulgogi, a chance encounter with a friend—make a difference.

The Crane Girl by Veronika Martenova Charles, 1993. (This was originally published by Orchard Books, an imprint that Scholastic would acquire.)

Yoshiko is excited at first. She has  new baby brother. but her parents became so busy with him that she begins to doubt her own place in their hearts.

Lonely, unhappy, longing for a new family, Yoshiko begs the cranes to take her in. "So be it!" says the leader, and together they swoop and whirl around her in a magical moonlit dance that transforms her into one of their young.

Raised by them, soaring with them, still she remembers her human family and one day swoops down to visit...

The Princess and the Beggar: A Korean Folktale adapted and illustrated by Anne Sibley O'Brien, 1993.

In the walled city of Pyung-yang, just below Peony Peak mountain, lives a young maiden, known to all as the Weeping Princess. But it is for her disobedience that the king banishes his daughter from court. The princess begins a new life with the poor, filthy beggar, Pabo Ondal, and in doing so, makes a discovery about herself. The metamorphosis of the Weeping Princess into the beggar's champion retains the timely feminist perspective of one of the oldest tales in Korean folklore.

The Khan's Daughter: A Mongolian Folktale by Laurence Yep, illustrated by Jean and Mou-Sien Tseng, 1997.

A poor shepard boy wins the hand of the Khan's beautiful daughter in this high-spirited folktale engagingly retold by Newbery Honor Book author Lawrence Yep.

A long time ago, Mongke, a shepherd boy, hears a prophecy that one day he will become rich and marry the Khan's daughter. When he sets out to claim his fortune, the imperial Khan laughs at his presumption and challenges him to carry out three harsh tasks. By luck alone, Mongke defeats seven demons and drives away an army, returning alden with treasure—and boastful. but when he is bested by the mighty Bagatur, really the Khan's daughter in disguise, Mongke finally meets his match, in more ways than one!

Hush! A Thai Lullaby by Minfong Ho, pictures by Holly Meade, 1996. (This was originally published by Orchard Books, an imprint that Scholastic would acquire.)

Lilting verse and bold, whimsical pictures tell the story of one mother's efforts to quiet the animals—from the smallest mosquito to the great big elephant—as their sounds threaten to wake her baby. But is Baby asleep? Let's see who is asleep—and who isn't!

Don't Tell the Scarecrow and Other Japanese Poems by Issa, Yayu, Kikaku and Other Japanese poets, illustrations by Talivaldis Stubis, 1696. (This was originally published by the Scholastic imprint Four Winds Press.)

Coco Can't Wait! A Story About a Girl and her Grandmother by Taro Gomi, 1983. (This story was originally published in Japan in 1979 and translated into English by William Morrow and Company, Inc. Additionally, in the original Japanese version, the little girl is called Yo-chan, which is also the name of the author's daughter.)

Middle Grade

The Royal Diaries: Lady of Ch'iao Kuo: Warrior of the South (Southern China, A.D. 531) by Lawrence Yep, 2001. 

The Royal Diaries: Kazunomiya: Prisoner of Heaven (Japan 1858) by Kathryn Lasky, 2004.

The Royal Diaries is a fictional series featuring real historical figures, specifically women of royalty from all over the world.

Finding My Hat by John Son, 2003. (This was originally published by Orchard Books, an imprint that Scholastic would acquire.)

Being different isn't easy. Especially for Jin-Han Park. He has no memories of Korea, but he's growing up with parents who cook kimchee for dinner, read korean newspapers, and don't always understand the ways of young American boys. But somehwere between kimchee and corn dogs, Jin-Han will make a place for himself...

Young Adult

Beacon Hill Boys by Ken Mochizuki, 2002.

Like other Japanese American families in the Beacon hill area of Seattle during the early 1970s, 16-year-old Dan Inagaki's parents expect him to be an example of the "model minority." But unlike Brad, Dan's old brother, who has 4.0 GPA, a college scholarship, and a white girlfriend, Dan is tired of being called "Oriental" by his teachers, and frustrated that no one in his family understands how invisible he feels.

Sharing Dan's anger and isolation are his best friends, Jerry Ito, Eddie Kanegae, and Frank Ishimoto. Together, these Beacon Hill boys struggle to come of age in an America that would continue to see young Asian Americans assimilate rather than stir up the proverbial melting pot. Ken Mochizuki, acclaimed for his unflinching portrayals of the asian American experience, tells a story of friendship, dignity, and discount that will resonate with teens everywhere.

Molly By Any Other Name by Jean Davies Okimoto, 1990.

Molly Jane Fletcher. She's an all-American girl with an all-American familyexcept for one thing. She's adopted.

And now that she's seventeen, she's beginning to feel haunted by questions about where she came from, why she was given up for adoption, whether she has other family. She has questions about her Asian heritage, questions her parents—who aren't Asian—can't answer. She's beginning to wonder who Molly Jane Fletcher really is.

Molly decides to find the answers. No matter how painful it is for her, for her parents, for the mother who gave her up at birth, Molly has to know the truth. Because only by knowing the truth about her past can Molly feel free to begin a life of her own.

Special thanks to Scholastic librarian Deimosa Webber-Bey for her ongoing help with this series!

Throwback Thursday: Professional books for Teacher Appreciation Week

Since this edition of Throwback Thursday is right in the middle of Teacher Appreciation Week, we're highlighting professional books! Professional books are titles meant to help teachers in the classroom as they work with students.

These books – most of them published in the late 60s and 70s – were published under the Citation Press imprint. According to Scholastic: A Publishing Adventure, "Citation Press (originally called Educators' Service when organized by William Boutwell in 1965), specialized in the publication of paperbacks for the education profession. Citation Press because a unit of the Library and Trade Division in 1970."

Citation Press no longer exists, but Scholastic still publishes professional books; check out the Scholastic Professional Online Press Kit on our Media Room for all the latest news!

These vintage books cover a wide variety of topics, whether it's actual subject matter (like science and art) or professional development. All are either written or edited by teachers, professors, or specialists. (The book on activities for substitute teacher was actually written by a substitute teacher in Ohio!) And, they all have *wild* cover art! 

Learning to Move and Moving to Learn by William G. Bentley, 1970 Open Education: The Informal Classroom by Charles H. Rathbone (editor), 1971 Educational Change: The Reality and the Promise by Richard R. Goulet (editor), 1968
Reality-Centered Learning by Hy Ruchlis and Belle Sharefkin, 1975
Teaching Africa Today: A Handbook for Teachers and Curriculum Planners by E. Jefferson Murphy and Harry Stein, 1973
Beyond Words: Nonverbal Communication in the Classroom by James J. Thompson, 1973
Pass the Poetry, Please! Using Poetry in Pre-Kindergarten-Six Classrooms by Lee Bennett Hopkins, 1972
Science Can Be Elementary: Discovery-Action Programs From K-3 by Barbara S. Waters, 1973
Half-Hour Notice: 50 Mini-Lessons for High School Substitutes by Mary Glenn Haskins, 1974
Art: Another Language for Learning by Elaine Pear Cohen and Ruth Straus Gainer, 1976

 

Throwback Thursday: Jean Marzollo

For this week's Throwback Thursday, we're celebrating the work of award-winning author Jean Marzollo.

Marzollo passed away this Tuesday at the age of 75. She joined Scholastic in 1972, and is most well-known for her popular I Spy series. However, I Spy was created in 1992, and during those 20 years leading up to the debut of the series, Marzollo served as the editor of Let’s Find Out, a monthly classroom magazine for kindergartners, and worked on a number of books spanning a variety of genres. For this post, we dug through our Archive and found some of those books! Let's take a look.

How to Help Children Learn Through Play, by Jean Marzollo and Janice Lloyd, illustrated by Irene Trivas, 1972.

From the Introduction: "This book is designed to help you, as a parent, enhance your child's natural play activities and encourage curiosity, creativity, and learing development at home. The authors, both former teachers, are closely involved in early childhood education and have written, among other things, the Parent/Teacher Guide to Sesame Street. In this book they offer a wealth of simple, but imaginative, activities that can give your child the basic learning skills he or she will need in the important school years ahead."

Out of Time, Into Love by Jean Marzollo, 1981.

(This title wasn't originally published by Scholastic, but reprinted by the Company under the Point imprint.) A teen romance set in the 19th century; also published with the title Halfway Down Paddy Lane. Another of Marzollo's teen romances include Do You Love Me, Harvey Burns? republished by Point in 1983.

A Read-and-Play Storybook: Baxter's Bad Day, written by Jean Marzollo, drawn by Shelly Thornton, 1983.

A read-and-play storybook is a story children can read themselves plus punch-out characters that can be used to act out the story.

A Read-and-Play Storybook: Cinderella, written by Jean Marzollo, drawn by Shelly Thornton, 1984.

Three Little Kittens retold by Jean Marzollo, illustrated by Shelley Thronton, 1985.

The naughty kittens have lost their mittens. But you'll know where to find them. The sweet and sprightly story in this book is based on the well-loved nursey rhyme, "The Three Little Kittens."

Special thanks to Scholstic librarian Deimosa Webber-Bey for her ongoing help with this series!

Throwback Thursday: Our first kid reporters

As you probably read here on OOM, we're looking for a new batch of kids to join the 2018–19 Scholastic News Kids Press Corps! The award-winning editorial team is comprised of kids from all over the world, ages 10–14, with a passion for journalism. They've covered everything from breaking news, current events, entertainment stories, and sporting events – no story is too big or too small! 

The Scholastic News Kids Press Corps launched in 2000, just in time to cover the presidential election. Keeping that year in mind, Deimosa and I browsed through the bound volumes of Scholastic News (the magazine that puts the "Scholastic News" in Scholastic News Kids Press Corps!) to see if we could find any coverage from (or of!) the first batch of kid reporters... and we were successful!

In the February 7, 2000 issue of Scholastic News: Teacher Edition, we found a letter from Suzanne Freeman, the then-editor of Scholastic News (not to be confused with Suzanne McCabe, the current editor for the Kids Press Corps), thanking teachers and parents who helped get kid reporters to various electoral events all over New Hampshire. At the end of her letter, Suzanne notes:

A great big thank you to the reporters. They showed true professionalism, from the way they approached the candidates, to the challenging questions they asked. And guess what else? It isn't over! Scholastic student reporters are preparing now for more election coverage. Keep reading!

(Although Suzanne was probably talking about election coverage through 2000, little did she know that kids would be on the ground covering elections over the next 18 years!)

Below is the cover and full article from the Senior Edition of the February 7, 2000 issue of Scholastic News documenting the work by the kid reporters. (Click the images to open a hi-res version!)

Then, we found another article featuring a number of kid reporters' first-hand accounts from the campaign trail in the March 6, 2000 Senior Edition of Scholastic News.

So, do you know a kid with a nose for news? If they're between the ages of 10 and 14, encourage them to apply to the Scholastic News Kids Press Corps! You can learn more here. The deadline for applications is May 31, 2018.

Special thanks to Librarian Deimosa Webber-Bey for her ongoing help with this series!

Throwback Thursday: Winter sports

It snowed in New York City this week and Punxsutawney Phil saw his shadow on Groundhog's Day. Winter's sticking around for awhile, so is it any surprise we have winter sports on our minds? This week in the Archive, Deimosa and I found some vintage titles featuring sports you can only play in the cold. 

Here are some titles published by Scholastic:

Hockey for Beginners by Kevin Walsh, 1976

This comprehensive, "how-to" guide is the perfect "coach" for beginning hockey players—designed to help you develop and sharpen your skills in all aspects of this exciting sport.

Avalanche by Arthur Roth, 1979

Chris and his brother Terry were just going out for a little skiing and a little hunting. The hungry coyote seemed an easy mark, but the echoing crack of the rifle sets off an avalanche, and Chris is buried alive under a mountain of snow. No one saw him go under. He is all alone. (description from Goodreads)

The Baby-sitters Club Little Sister #56: Karen's Ice Skates by Ann M. Martin, 1994

Karen got an early Christmas present from Granny and Grandad—new ice skates! Karen can't wait to try them out. There is only one problem. The ice on the pond is not ready for skating.

But Karen and her friends go look at the ice anyway. And before she knows it, something terrible has happened...

And here are some books Scholastic didn't orginally publish, but received the rights to publish for the school market (aka: through Scholastic Book Clubs):

Dynamite on Ice: The Bobby Orr Story by Hal Bock, 1972

Meet Bobby Orr, superstar of the National Hockey League. From Parry Sound, Ontario, where 12-year-old Bobby was first spotted by NHL scouts... to the Boston Garden, where at the age of 18 he joined the Boston Bruins whom he later led to the cherished Stanley Cup...

Dynamite on Ice is the complete and exciting story of Bobby Orr—Rookie of the Year—Bobby Orr—Most Valuable Player—Bobby Orr—Best All-Around Defenseman.

Magic Attic Club: Alison Goes for the Gold by Catherine Connor, 1997

Alison travels through the mirror to the Junior World Cup Skating Championship and she skates to the finals. Alison wants to win—until she tangles on the ice with the cool-tempered Katja from Germany. Can she be friends with her rival? Who will take home the Gold?

Special thanks to Librarian Deimosa Webber-Bey for her ongoing help with this series!

Throwback Thursday: On this day

With shelves and shelves filled with old issues of our Scholastic classroom magazines, Deimosa and I decided to go back to a very specific date for today's Throwback Thursday: January 18th.

It took a little mental math as we browsed through all our bound volumes, but eventually we were able to find some old magazines that were published on exactly January 18th. What were we talking about back then? Space, apparently! Click any of the images below to open hi-res versions!

On this day 61 years ago: Junior Scholastic magazine (1957)

On this day 47 years ago: Scholastic NewsTime magazine (1971)

A bit of background: Launched in 1952, the first 15 issues of NewsTime were originally called Junior American Citizen. NewsTime then became Newstime (a subtle difference), then Scholastic News Edition 6 in 1993. Finally, Scholastic News Edition 6 merged with Scholastic News Edition 5 to become Scholastic News Grades 5/6 in 1994.

Special thanks to Librarian Deimosa Webber-Bey for her ongoing help with this series!

Throwback Thursday: Merry Christmas

Happy Throwback Thursday! With this being the last Thursday before Christmas, Deimosa and I decided to look for vintage Christmas books. We found a very unique mix!

The Picture Book You May Not Remember

Cranberry Christmas by Wende and Harry Devlin, 1976

Mr. Whiskers faces a gloomy Christmas until Maggie and her grandmother help him straighten out his house and find the deed to the nearby pond. (I had never heard of this book before and found the story and illustrations absolutely charming!)

The Anthology of Classics

Treasury of Christmas Stories, edited by Ann McGovern, 1960

Like the surprises you might find in your Christmas stocking, here is a wonderful potpouri of holiday cheer for readers of ALL ages. (This anthology features poems, short stories, chapter excerpts and songs which will definitely help you get in the Christmas spirit.)

The Horror Anthology

Haunting Christmas Tales by Joan Aiken & others, 1991

Ho, ho, ho, BOO! Have you ever met a Christmas ghost? Suspected that one of the presents under the tree might be haunted? Spent an old-fashioned Christmas–in a haunted house? In these nine stories of Christmas past and present, scary things have a way of happening–where the people in them have been naughty or nice. Welcome... to a little Christmas fear... (An anthology of short stories for those who wish it could be Halloween all year long!)

The Holidays Cards Meant to Tickle Funny Bones

The Bananas Book of Season's Greetings Cards by Jane Stine and Jovial Bob Stine, 1979.

The holidays will be a little brighter this year! If you paint your walls yellow and orange! Or, if you send these wacky BANANAS Season's Greeting cards! There are 26 cards in all–ready to read and sign, ready to cut out and send, ready to show your friends that you have the kind of taste they always knew you had! When your friends recieve a BANANAS card from you, they're bound to say, "Thanks a bunch!" THE BANANAS BOOK OF SEASON'S GREETING CARDS is from those same crazy cards who bring you BANANAS, today's most insane magazine for teenagers! (If I had had this book growing up, I guarantee I would have re-created the cards so I wouldn't have to cut them out. I definitely would have wanted to keep the book pristine!) 

 

 


Special thanks to Librarian Deimosa Webber-Bey for her ongoing help with this series!

Throwback Thursday: the Dewey Decimal System

If you're a librarian, or fan of libraries, December 10th is a very special day for you: it's Dewey Decimal System Day

The Dewey Decimal System was created by Melvil Dewey back in 1876, and has gone through a few revisions since then. This system determines how librarians group and order books on the shelves, and helps them know exactly where to put books back.

Our librarian Deimosa remembered a very specific poster about the Dewey Decimal System when she was in school. It features a series of questions to consider about yourself and the world around you, and how those questions can lead you to one of 10 sections of the system. It's within that section that you can then find the book you're looking for. 

To this day, this logic presented on this poster is how Deimosa explains the system to others! (She even talked about it on an episode of our Scholastic Reads podcast.) 

Deimosa recently found the 1968 version of the poster in our Archives. After a little a digging through our poster collection (that's right, we have a copy of every poster our Book Clubs ever sold) we also found a 1985 reprint! (The difference is glossier paper, and slightly different colors.) So for this Throwback Thursday and upcoming Dewey Decimal System Day, check them out! (You can click the images to enlarge.)

1968 poster

1985 poster

Special thanks to Scholastic librarian Deimosa Webber-Bey for her help with this series!

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