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A volunteer puppeteer hid behind the end of her bed, poked a Rumpe Is type doll over the bed frame, and said "hello." For the first time in weens, the girl smiled through a maze of bandages and talked quietly to her new twinkle-eye- d friend. More than 200 hospitals across the country distribute hand puppets to child patients. One, the Kaiser Foundation hospital at Oakland, Calif., teaches puppetry as part of the regular nurses' training course in pediatrics. But not all of these midget mimics four-year-o- Patients need help 'u'sIa int -o- grinning, colorfully dressed Peter Multiple Sclerosis U advertising signs, often scribbled and sometimes misspelled, which have weathered both depression and competition since Grandfather's day: One Lemonade" and the reads, "Ice-CoThis Afternoon." Show other, "Puppet But today, while the offspring of Punch and Judy still nourish in back yards, on the stage, and before television cameras, many have moved out from behind the footlights. Throughout the United States, a ris characters parade of plaster f-pa assist in psychiatric therapy, are on hospital staffs, and bring the story of God to students of all faiths. A troubled youngster, doctors find, tells his problems more freely to a ld E33 SITIII t i i l here are two neignDornooa 12 Family Weekly, Mar J7, 1957 are working for children. Many are leading the way in adult education teaching safety, citizenship, and health. In Newark, N. J., the police department impressed traffic violators with a puppet automobile crash, while in Ontario, Canada, marionettes showed instructors how to teach citizenship to newly arrived immigrants. Down under in Australia, puppets even invaded a prenatal clinic and became the feature attraction at Melbourne's Victoria hospital. The show was created after nurses and doctors unsuccessfully cautioned prospective mothers about dangerous foods. Their advice was ignored regularly until a group of puppeteers produced a stage battle between good foods and bad ones. Then so many mothers returned daily to the clinic that nurses had to be taught to give the performances. Puppets have no parallel in ability to explain a problem dramatically. George Merten, president of the Puppeteers of America, an enthusiastic group of 800 amateurs and professionactor als, believes the plaster-of-par- is is more convincing because he is the character in the story and isn't only pretending to be like him. Because of this quality the puppet has made an enviable record in Sunday school. Many teachers have adopted miniature replicas of Biblical figures to bring to life a host of Bible stories. The Rev. William R. Jacoby, ious-education consultant to the relig- Puppeteers of America and a pioneer in making puppets tell the story of God, has traveled all through the United States performing his plays. "Puppets," he says, "can be made invaluable in the religious work of Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish faiths alike portraying Bible stories, morals, ethics, and culture without bias, prejudice, or controversy. This is something that human beings find very difficult to accomplish." But besting human actors is an old story to these miniature dramatists. In politics, where histrionics are part of many a campaign, a few hardy storybook characters have even aided their candidate to victory! Several years ago, one of the puppet favorites, Pinocchio, the wooden boy of Italy, helped defeat the Communist party there. He became a campaign issue in Pescia, where he was born more than 75 years ago from the pen of Carlo Lorenzini, a poor newspaperman. Rolando Anzillotti, Christian Democrat candidate for mayor, fighting against a strong Communist opponent, promised to build a statue to Pinocchio if he were elected. Anzillotti was elected, Pinocchio got his statue, and children submitting winning sketches for it were rewarded in true puppet tradition: they received a special Pinocchio certificate, signed by the mayor and allowing them one fib a week without harm to their noses! . . . all-ti- fib-telli- ng me |