Party Line! Gianni Rodari’s Telephone Tales.Operator, Operator, Connect me to Signor Rodari for more Telephone Tales!.Before Viral Animal Videos: Andrew Lang’s Animal Story Book (1896).Two Hearts: Explaining Pregnancy to Soviet Children.An Enslaved Girl Dances for Joy When the Slave Trade is Abolished.Banned Books: Lawrence Schimel’s Rainbow Family Stories Illustrated by Elina Braslina.Great American Women Cookbook Writers in Picture Book Herstories.Pooping, Mewling and Puking: Iona Opie’s Babies: An Unsentimental Anthology (1990).Do Stories Come Out of Thin Air?: Salman Rushdie Has an Answer.Learning to Make Invisible Inks and Other Projects from The Young Gentleman’s and Lady’s Magazine (1799).Adventures in Bookstores: Celebrating Read-A-Book Day 2022.Benjamin Harris’s Protestant Tutor (1679): Teaching Religion, Reading, and Writing in a Time of Crisis.Black Shuck the Spectral Dog, Agent of the Good?!!!!!.Some Baby Memory Books from around the World.Visit Cotsen's Outreach Blog Categories Categories Recent Posts In his debut poster from October 10, 1944, the fire preventing mascot is a little more squat and rotund than the tall and burly bear we are used to:Įvents and items in the collection of Cotsen Children's Library presented by the curatorial staff. Though his message has mostly remained the same, over the years Smokey’s appearance and persona has changed quite a bit. Some researchers have even pointed to how the “ smokey bear effect” has lead to larger wildfires caused by the over zealous campaign against fire prevention. The only slight difference is that in 2001 “forest fires” was changed to “wildfires” in order to better emphasize that fires occur in areas other than forests and that some fires are controlled or preventative and good for forest development. This direct and simple message has been pretty consistent since then. Though Smokey was originally conceived in Augby Albert Staehle, the familiar phrase above began in 1947. Or as the classic ad campaign succinctly puts it: As America’s longest running public service ad campaign Smokey has, for seventy five years, been reminding children and adults alike that it is exclusively our responsibility to practice fire safety in wilderness areas. Today is the official birthday of one of America’s favorite civil servants: Smokey Bear.
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