<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9002170258
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
901216
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, December 16, 1990
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
COM
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1990, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
LET KIDS BE KIDS AT CHRISTMASTIME
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
I am walking through the toy store. I am shopping for the holidays. I am
looking for one item -- and one item only -- something that, to me, always
symbolized the magic of this season.

  I am looking  for a pencil box.

  "We have a discount on Nintendo," says the toy salesman, yanking me
towards the computer section. "Ten percent off Swords and Serpents, Magic
Johnson's Fast Break, Tradewest Super  Off Road and, of course, Mindscape
Gauntlet II."
  "I am looking for a pencil box," I say.
  "Heh-heh," he says. "That's a good one. Look, if you don't like Nintendo,
how about a miniature LCD  game, maybe Top Gun by Konami, or Batman by Tiger
Electronics? Kids love those. And we're running a special. Batteries not
included, of course."
  "Pencil box?" I say.
  "Keyboards!" he says. "How  about these electronic keyboards with 16
pre-sets for rhythm and instrumental tracks? Cool, huh? Or this miniature Hot
Lykx guitar? Check this baby out. Make the kid feel like Van Halen."
  "Pencil  box?" I whisper.
  "Van Haaaaalen," he sings.
Who needs batteries?
  I do not want the kid to feel like Van Halen. I do not want the kid to
blow fighter jets out of an electronic sky. I want the  kid to have the same
simple burst of wonder that I had when I first got the pencil box years ago,
and I pulled back the white-ribbed door and watched it magically disappear
into the red plastic.
  It did not require batteries, this pencil box. It did not come with an LCD
readout. It was simply a place to store your pencils, or erasers, or whatever.
That was the joy. You could hide anything in  there. You shut the white-ribbed
door and it was safe, yours forever. Such a feeling! At an age when your
mother still cut your lamb chops, and your father still pinned the mittens to
your jacket, the  pencil box meant responsibility. Privacy. Your own secret
storage.
  "Vehicles!" says the salesman, dragging me to a display area that
resembles a miniature car lot. "We've got the whole line of Power  Wheels.
We've got race cars. We've even got this battery-powered Barbie Corvette."
  "Barbie Corvette?" I say.
  "Great, huh? Your little girl can cruise the neighborhood. Goes 3 1/2
miles an hour.  Power-lock brakes. Only $149.99. Even a make-believe car phone
on the dash."
  "Look, I -- "
  "How about this?" he says, pushing over a small jeep that looks like it
could drive through the Kalahari  desert. "For $269.99, we've got this
battery-powered Jeep Safari.  Opening doors. Realistic dash. A make-pretend
engine with a real dipstick. Great, huh?" 
  A dipstick?
The search continues 
  I do not want dipsticks. I do not want car phones. I do not want something
that will make the kid feel like an adult. There is too much time in life to
feel like an adult. And not enough to feel like  a kid.
  With the pencil box I felt like a kid. It was the first present I ever
received. I would take it to school and sneak peeks at it under my desk top. I
would slide the white-ribbed door back  and forth and imagine it was the trap
door to the universe, or a tiny magic carpet. 
  Oh, the things I could hide in there! A paper clip. A penny. A magic rock.
And when the teacher caught me daydreaming,  I would tell her I was just
checking to see if my pencils were sharpened. And she bought it!
  "Ninja Turtles!" yells the salesman. "The kid has to be into Ninja
Turtles! Or these Bart Simpson dolls  by Mattel!"
  "No," I say.
  "Board games! I've got Electronic Battleship. Or Heartthrob. Or Let's Go
Shopping."
  "Nuh-uh," I say.
  "Look, I've got this Spectra-Sound Drum Set, complete  with sticks. Or
this  Matchbox Motor City Carwash. Say, I've got a great price on this radio
control Mini-Typhoon Hovercraft, good on land or water."
  "I just want a pencil box," I say.
  "A pencil  box," he repeats.
  He shrugs and takes me to the office equipment section. I see computers. I
see printers. I see full-color monitors and electronic slide rules.
  I do not see any pencil boxes.  I wonder where they have gone. I wonder
what ever happened to the simple presents that grew in a child's imagination,
grew and grew, until they were something spectacular -- instead of the
spectacular  presents that can only dull as the batteries wear down.
  "You sure you don't want the Mini-Typhoon Hovercraft?" asks the salesman.
I tell him thanks, I will keep looking. I am dreaming of little  yellow
pencils in a red plastic box, and wishing I still had my mittens.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>

</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
