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Pupils get gift of words

October 15, 2009 12:36 am

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Marcus Logan, 8 (left), John Hansen, 9 (center), and Herbie Brensinger, 8, look at their new dictionaries from the King George Ruritans. lo1015dictionary3.jpg

Zaria Kenney, 8, a third-grader at King George Elementary School, takes a look at her new dictionary on Tuesday. The King George Ruritans gave third-graders the dictionaries. lo1015dictionary2.jpg

Betty Lee Stanley of the King George Ruritan Club hands out dictionaries to third-graders at King George Elementary School.

By CATHY DYSON

Children don't usually cheer over dictionaries, but Tuesday's distribution of books at King George Elementary School brought out thunderous applause.

"This has everything in the whole world in it," said a grinning Clare Ray, as she thumbed through her paperback version of "A Student's Dictionary" on Tuesday. "I'm obsessed with this."

Clare is among more than 400 third-graders and teachers in King George County, including home-schooled students and those at the Navy-supported Dahlgren School, who will get free dictionaries this month, courtesy of the King George Ruritan Club.

"You don't know how it does my heart good to see you get excited about something you can use your whole life," said Aubrey Mitchell, a Ruritan who organized the project.

He and other Ruritans from King George and the Chesapeake District gave each student a dictionary that includes the typical definitions and parts of speech--and then some.

The book also features multiplication tables, the Declaration of Independence and information about states, planets and presidents.

As the red paperbacks filled the cafeteria where the students assembled, many third-graders flipped to a section in the back of the book and practiced American Sign Language.

"This is super cool, isn't it?" asked teacher Rhonda Inzana as a group of students formed various letters with their fingers.

The Dictionary Project is funded by Verizon Pioneers, a community-service branch of the communications company. Working with local sponsors, the Pioneers have distributed almost 10 million dictionaries to students across America since 1995.

The Ruritans paid $1.70 for each book for a total of almost $700. Donations from businesses and residents, including Joyce and Homer Hite--who first suggested the program to Mitchell--helped with the funding.

"This is one of the greatest projects that Ruritans have ever gotten into," Mitchell said, adding that King George Elementary was the first public school east and north of Richmond to get the free books. "It's quite a privilege."

It couldn't have come at a better time, teachers said, as the third-graders put together their own dictionaries about autumn.

"A lot of times, we send work home, and a lot of kids say they don't have a dictionary at home," said teacher Pat Gwin. "So now, everyone will."

dictionaryproject.org

Cathy Dyson: 540/374-5425
Email: cdyson@freelancestar.com





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