Friday, April 13, 2007
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
If I BANG MY LUNCHBAG IN YOUR EAR!!!!
This silly poem was one of my favorites when I was younger.
Making Faces
Don't you know
that if you make
that awful face,
you know the one
eyelids pulled down,
nose pulled up,
tongue between your fingers-yuck!
and if I tiptoe up behind you on my ghost-feet sneakers,
and I
BANG MY LUNCH BAG IN YOUR EAR
Hah!
your face is going to stay that way forever!
By Michael Spooner
Making Faces
Don't you know
that if you make
that awful face,
you know the one
eyelids pulled down,
nose pulled up,
tongue between your fingers-yuck!
and if I tiptoe up behind you on my ghost-feet sneakers,
and I
BANG MY LUNCH BAG IN YOUR EAR
Hah!
your face is going to stay that way forever!
By Michael Spooner
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
Get ready, Superman fans!
You've read the comics, seen the TV shows and movies, and maybe you've even worn the costumes for Halloween.
Now you can visit the American Super Heroes Museum in Indianapolis. The museum opened on March 31.
Its founder, Dane Nash, was fascinated with Superman as a child. He opened the museum to showcase his large collection of Superman, Batman and other memorabilia - including costumes worn on TV and in films from the 1930s on, according to The Indianapolis Star.
Mr. Nash also plans to eventually display his replica of the Batmobile — a Corvette engine and a capsule over the driving compartment that pops up and slides back. I'm sure people would come from far and wide to see that!
The museum, at 20 W. Louisiana St., is open Monday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. and Sundays, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Details at http://www.heroesmuseum.com/ or 317-687-1938. Admission is $5; free for kids under 8.
Now you can visit the American Super Heroes Museum in Indianapolis. The museum opened on March 31.
Its founder, Dane Nash, was fascinated with Superman as a child. He opened the museum to showcase his large collection of Superman, Batman and other memorabilia - including costumes worn on TV and in films from the 1930s on, according to The Indianapolis Star.
Mr. Nash also plans to eventually display his replica of the Batmobile — a Corvette engine and a capsule over the driving compartment that pops up and slides back. I'm sure people would come from far and wide to see that!
The museum, at 20 W. Louisiana St., is open Monday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. and Sundays, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Details at http://www.heroesmuseum.com/ or 317-687-1938. Admission is $5; free for kids under 8.
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