Good Evening, Class!

Welcome Students, Parents, Alumni (and the NSA)! I don't just work from 6:45 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. I'm apt to be thinking about something for class at any time of the day or night. So I decided to start "THS After Hours" as a way of extending our day. If you're new at the blog, the most recent entries are at the top of the page, and they get older and older as you go down the page. Just like archaeology.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Something to Be Proud of

Do they still do this?  "Trick or Treat for UNICEF"?  I can remember doing this, as I went door-to-door on the Tolland Green back in the 1960's.

We can thank Mary Emma Allison, who, just before Halloween, passed away at the age of 93.

Six decades ago, on a fall afternoon, a young woman caught sight of a children’s parade. She followed the children, in bright native dress, as they wended their way through the streets of the town. They entered a store, with the woman behind them, and inside the store she encountered a cow. She followed the cow, and she came to a booth.
 On account of the children, the cow and the booth, the woman came up with a world-changing plan. ... 
The booth was in Wanamaker’s department store in Philadelphia, and it belonged to Unicef. The parade of costumed children (and the cow) was part of a campaign to send powdered milk to needy children overseas.
The woman was a schoolteacher named Mary Emma Allison. Moved by her chance encounter, she and her husband created Trick-or-Treat for Unicef, a Halloween ritual that celebrates its 60th anniversary on Sunday and has raised tens of millions of dollars for children worldwide.

Here's a little radio piece on Mrs. Allison from NPR.   Have a listen.

1 comment:

Sarah Anischik said...

We used to have quarters on hand along with our trick-or-treat candy every year and I never really realized what it was for until we stopped preparing for it a couple years ago. No one in my neighborhood has collected donations in quite a few years, and it's too bad that the donations have been tapering off. It's really brilliant to combine trick-or-treating with helping to raise money for a great cause. It helps to make children more aware about what is going on in the world, and we all know how important that is.