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April 28, 2005 - Image 55

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2005-04-28

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

*

NOW SERVING THE
BEST FRIED MATZAH!
Ets
D ine

i"



Every Picture
Tells A Story

Chicago's Spertus Museum teaches tolerance
through childrens picture books.

LYNNE KONSTANTIN
Special to the Jewish News

I

n the children's picture book
Enemy Pie, written by Derek
Munson and illustrated by Tara
Calahan King, a young boy's summer
is ruined when his soon-to-be enemy-
number-one moves in down the block.
Fortunately, the boy's father knows
how to make Enemy Pie, a foolproof
recipe for getting rid of enemies. But
part of the recipe requires the boy to
spend a day being nice to his sworn
enemy. So the pair shoot hoops, throw
water balloons, play checkers and
cards in a tree house — and the
enemy becomes a friend.
Illustrations from Enemy Pie are just
a few of the nearly 100 original illus-
trations and enlarged replications from
more than 40
favorite chil-
dren's books,
both classic and
new, that are
arranged
b and
interpreted into
interactive envi-
ronments in
"Every Picture
Tells a Story,"
an exhibition
running

Top 10

If you can't get to Chicago to see
"Every Picture Tells a Story," you can
always get to a library to read some of
the books included. Here, a Top 10
list of museum director Rhoda Rosen
and senior curator Susan Bass Marcus'
favorites for teaching tolerance to
children and their parents:

• Enemy Pie, by Derek Munson;
illustrated by Tara Calahan King

• Rip Squeak and His Friends, by
Susan Yost-Filgate; illustrated by
Leonard Filgate.

• Jump!, by Floyd Cooper

through Sept. 11 at Spertus Museum
in Chicago.
Through messages of diversity, ethi-
cal behavior and self-esteem, the goal
of the exhibit is to help children —

EVERY PICTURE on page 56

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• David Goes to School, by David
Shannon

• When Africa Was Home, by Karen
Lynn Williams; illustrated by Floyd
Cooper

• Charlotte's Web, by E.B. White;
illustrated by Garth Williams

• It's Okay to be Different, by Todd
Parr

• Pinkish, Purplish, Bluish Egg, by
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