Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, December 5, 1969 Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, December 5, 1969 A STORY TO BE READ ALOUD How the Pooh found Christmas-really By MICHAEL DOVER In Which Pooh and Party Look for Haycorns and Discov- er Christmas. (To be read aloud, if possible, beneath a large quilt, on a Sun- day morning, with someone you love, for, that is how it was written.) IT FELT LIKE snowing that day, and, to Pooh's surprise, it did. About half past a little something that morning, we find Pooh sitting beneath one of his favorite haycorn trees. Just sitting there in a pleasant daze dreaming of pleasant days and a hazy world where it rained honey. All of a sudden, who cane along but a snowflake. It didn't announce itself, or say "Hello, how are you?" (Say fine, thank- you). It just fluffed down and landed on the tippy-tip-tip of Pooh's cold little nose. Now Winnie-the-Pooh was not used to snow. In fact, he didn't even know what it was. Last winter, we can remember, he buried himself in a brown fur knicker and a big fur cap and fu'rydoawnmittens i a big fur bed and slept the whole winter away dreaming of big fur bears. Having gone to bed about the time the leaves turn from honey to brown, he hadn't seen the snow until the next spring, when it was water. (And believe it or not, none of the other animals knew what snow was either, be- cause they hadn't been looking in the right direction in past winters!) So then, we can see that Pooh could be very disturbed at this airborne intruder into his land of dreams. But what was even more disturbing to Pooh was that, his eyeballs being where they were used to being, and not feeling too much like moving, it was impossible for him to see this white fleck of fluff. And, of course, said Pooh, "If I can't see it, well then, it isn't there." And pretty soon he was right! Be- cause, while Pooh Bear does have a cold nose, he doesn't have that cold a nose, and after a short wait all that was left was a trickle of water. Although Pooh never really figured out what it was that landed on his nose, he did notice that this strange fluff was fall- ing all over the place. He stuck out his paw to catch some, but no sooner had he caught it than it wasn't there anymore. Pooh just didn't know quite what to think. And when Winnie-the- Pooh doesn't know what to think, he knows someone who does. So off he went towards Christopher Robin's. COn the way lie stumbled into Rabbit and Owl, who had notic- ed that the ground seemed to be changing color. Owl had been flying around surveying his ter- ritory, when he first observed this strange phenomena. As Pooh approached, Owl was con- ferring with his colleague Rab- bit as to the probable nature of this variance in the environ- nient. "Undoubtedly." Rabbit was saying, "I agree with your theory that this is a perfectly natural and cyclical result of a change in the seasons. However, I can not help but wonder what type of seasoning has brought about this change in the color of the ground." "That is a good question, Prof. Rabbit, which requires Earnest Thought." Rabbit pondered, "I thing we can find the answer through the process of logic called parallel transference. Give me just a moment to think." For about as long as it takes to screw in a lightbulb, Owl and Rabbit gazed steadfastly at the ground beneath their feet. - eh grphed by Richard ee.Studio courtesy of U. of M. Photo Services Pants with cuffs! Cuffed pants and a sshort vest team up with a long cuffed shirt to create a sporty mood. Available at Paraphernalia. Had they looked up, they might have seen the Bear stand- ing there, face uplifted, paws outstretched, taking it all in, waiting for Owl and Rabbit to finish their little dissertation. "Ah yes," Owl said inspiratIon- ally, "I have it. Let us assume leaves. Then we add that leaves change color over time. If we add the seasoning which you so astutely mentioned, we are like- ly to find that ground (earthus dirtius) as well as leaves change color over time." THE SNOW was beginning to fall fairly rapidly by this time. Rabbit and Owl, however, were so busy studying the ge- netic composition of the ground beneath their studious eyes, that they hadn't bothered to notice that by this time the sun was taking a nap behind the clouds. The snow had by now complete- ly covered the ground and was almost as high as Rabbit's toe- nail. "Still, how are we to account for this Change in the Mass of the Earth?" Owl queried, "If my calculations are correct, and the whole world, indeed, all my territory from the Big Stones and Rocks to the Floody Place s covered with this fluff, then there is at least a statistically NBT iS yQUr master Ch g bn k in Ann Arbo Join the 20 million cardholders enjoying the one-card convenience of Master Charge. It's honored at over 500,000 merchants and 3,000 member banks. Applications available by mail, at any NBT office, or by calling 663-3331. NATIONAL BANK & TRUST COMPANY OFANN ARBOR Nina Offices in Ann Arbor and Milan significant amount of fluff pre- sent. Simply a change in color could not account for all this. Where is it all coming from?" Before he could hear Rabbit's response, Pooh was upon them. Rabbit and Owl responded to Pooh's greetings by raising their eyes from the ground long enough to give Pooh the cour- tesy and privilege o fa look, (al- though, believe it or not, the small bear was their friend). "Strange," said Pooh, "This fluff is falling all over the place, but none of it seems to land on me. I'm almost blind there's so much of it, but just as it lands on me it disappears. "This is a strange disorder," said Owl, "Unique in the history of man. We had been pondering the same thing, hadn't we Rab- bit?" "Why, why, why yes we had Pooh and-" "Why, y-yes we had Pooh," Owl panicked, having begun to look up uneasily at the sky, "And the conclusion we had come to was that, HELP, HELP Rabbit, the sky is falling, the sky is falling." The origin of all this fluff had finally impressed itself on Owl. He thought about flying away, but was scared he too would fall. Rabbit, of course, was some- what shaken himself. But seeing as Owl panicked first, he could see no point in it. Besides, the more that the stuff fell, the taller the rabbit seemed to get! Rabbit tried to calm Owl down, with some success. "All. I can say," said Owl, "is that those things look an awful lot like feathers." "Now be still, Owl," Rabbit pacified. "It is not feathers, that is falling, what it is is simply, is is the-clouds-breaking-up into-small-pieces-and-falling - back-to-earth! I think we should tell Robin immediately." "Yes let's ask Robin," said Pooh, anxious (as, you know, bears will be) to be on his way. So all three trundled off to Christopher Robin's. On the way, they stopped by to pick up Piglet, who rode on Pooh's back seeing that the snow was get- ting very deep for small pigs. Piglet, too, was scared: "How am I going to find my haycorns with all this snow on the ground?" he worried. "Well, it's too late now," said the Rabbit. "You should have saved for the winter." But before Pooh could intervene with a Helpful Comment it occurred to Owl: "What did you call this stuff?" he asked, looking up at the sky and then back at the ground again and again, as if he wondered whether to believe his own eyes. "Snow," Piglet answered. "Oh... Oh????? What were your sources?" See ON, Page 13