connect-the-dots
Johnson, Ellen
ejohnson at BERRY.EDU
Tue May 21 19:44:24 UTC 2002
there's another dot game where dots are drawn in a grid and you take turns drawing one line (i,.e. connecting 2 dots horizontally or vertically) at a time. whoever makes a box puts their initials in it. one with the most boxes wins. sort of hard to explain without giving a demonstration. Ellen
-----Original Message-----
From: Zitin, Abigail [mailto:zitina at OUP-USA.ORG]
Sent: Tuesday, May 21, 2002 2:53 PM
To: ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
Subject: Re: connect-the-dots
For what it's worth: my mother reminded me that when I was little (early 80s) we called connect-the-dot puzzles "dot-to-dots". I searched this on the Proquest NY Times backfile, and found a racehorse named "Dot to Dot" in the 1960s, and a display ad for a "dot to dot" Wamsutta sheet pattern in 1974. I can't tell whether these examples reflect the name of the children's game, or not, though I imagine the one from 1974 does (why else would "dot to dot" be a clever name for polka-dotted sheets?).
I found the following on Questia:
1961 William M. Cruickshank, ed. _A Teaching Method for Brain-injured and Hyperactive Children: A Demonstration-pilot Study_ chapter IV p. 203
If numbers are among his strong points, a dot-to-dot puzzle may help.
There follows an image of a connect-the-dots game.
Best,
Abigail Zitin
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