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Danette Goulet
COSTA MESA -- It began as a low and distant rumbling, growing louder as
they neared, until they surrounded me.
It was 11:45 a.m.: lunchtime for first-graders at Kaiser Primary Center.
Within moments, a line snaked around the corner and out the doors of the
multipurpose room into the gray morning. Students waited -- more
patiently than I ever did as a child -- to pick up a plastic foam tray of
various odd-shaped sections that hold the lunch de jour.
A smiling woman wearing a black hairnet and blue apron continuously
placed plastic bags containing two tiny cheeseburgers on trays, pushing
them forward as little hands swept them up.
My line mates informed me that salads were also available, but that I
should eat the burgers. Far be it from me to argue. Burgers it was.
I had, it seems, missed the best day, Friday -- pizza day, they said.
Funny, but Friday was pizza day when I was in elementary school, too.
As the line curved, we picked up a packet with a straw, napkin and
plastic knife, fork and spoon.
Having reverted to childhood, I snatched a chocolate milk before I felt
someone patting me on the hip. The little girl behind me held up a
strawberry milk. Tempting, but I stuck with the chocolate for old time’s
sake.
Next was a tray piled with little plastic cups of shredded lettuce -- I
figured out hours later that it must have been for my burger. Then came
bags of carrots and, last, a frozen orange juice bar.
The kids took what they wanted and left the rest.
Because it was cold and gloomy and looked like rain, we had to eat
inside. Eating outside is much better, said Isaiah Glenn, who sat next to
me.
“Because you can get straight to playing,” explained the 7-year-old.
“From in here you have to go outside and then cross the black top, which
you’re not supposed to run on.”
And so we ate inside.
Across the table, I watched Chandler Fergus, 7, pull munchies out of her
lunch box and eat them one at a time: cottage cheese with fruit, turkey
lunchmeat-wrapped carrot sticks on toothpicks, two cookies carefully
enclosed in plastic wrap and a small red apple.
All the students who brought their meals had lunch boxes, but they
weren’t like I remembered them. Kids no longer carry the metal lunch
boxes that can be accidentally whacked on the bus door and seats without
harming the contents. Now they all carry soft, insulated fabric packs
with zippers.
A few seats down, Lauren Terry, 6, unzipped her lunch pack and began
assembling prepackaged pizzas, getting more cheese on the table than on
the muffin.
“Look, look,” she said, as she bit the center out of a piece of pepperoni
and stuck her tongue through it.
Maybe things haven’t changed that much -- new lunch boxes, same old fun.
Above the din of children’s voices we began to hear sporadic popping
sounds. Isaiah jumped.
“Oooh, they’re gonna get a pink slip,” he said.
After a few more pops a shrill whistle sounded and they all stopped in
their tracks.
“Do not pop these bags,” shouted noon monitor Eileen Shafer, holding up
one of the bags that held the plastic utensils.
In less than a minute, the chatter rose again to its previous pitch.
After Chandler polished off her apple, she zipped up her bag and raised
her hand. With a nod and a wave from another noon monitor, Mr. Gale, the
young girl trotted out to recess.
When I asked what that was all about, Isaiah informed me that when you
are ready to leave you have to raise your hand and wait to be excused.
After licking my frozen juice stick clean, I tossed it in the garbage and
raised my hand.
FYI
* Who: First-grade students
* Where: Kaiser Primary Center
* What: Lunch
* Meal: Two tiny cheeseburgers, carrots, milk and an orange juice frozen
bar.
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