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When you were a kid, all you needed was your crew and a warm sunny day to have a ball. There was no sitting in the house, bored stiff with nothing to do. You would run wildly, like your life depended on it, from the kid chosen as “it” or play one of these other classic childhood games. Which were your favorite?

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Red Light, Green Light

The streetlight kid would stand at one end of the street with a crew of kids at the other. The streetlight kid would shout – Green light! One, two three . . . .Kids would run to reach the streetlight until he hollered Red light! Everyone had to freeze. If you budged, you had to go back to the beginning.

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Mother May I

Kids would ask “mother” if they could take two steps, a giant skip, or a hop, etc. to get close enough to tap the mother. She would say “Yes you may.” If you failed to ask permission without saying Mother May I, not only would you be rejected, but you’d have to start from the beginning again.

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Hide and Go Seek

If you were “it” you’d negotiate a count off number with the rest of your friends. You would then cover your eyes and count to said number while the rest of the your friends ran to a hiding place. You would then hollar – Ready or not, here I come and go on the prowl to find your friend’s hiding spots.

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Duck Duck Goose

Everyone sits in a circle while one kid goes around, tapping the head of each person and says “Duck” along the way. Then the person taps a head and hollers “Goose!” He runs and the goose has to get up and give chase with the intent of tagging him before he gets  back to the space where the goose was sitting.

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Hop Scotch

A series of large squares drawn with sidewalk chalk could make for hours of fun. You would throw a stone or bean bag into a square, careful not to touch a line or you’d lose your turn. Then you would hop the squares with only one foot, skipping the one you have marked. If you touched a line with one foot or put your other foot down, you lose a turn. If you finish, for round two, you place your marker on another square and repeat.

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What Time Is It, Mr. Fox?

Mr. Fox is at one end of the field with his back turned to the group of kids at the other end. They holler -What time is it, Mr. Fox? He responds with a time (12 o’ clock or 1 o’ clock). The group of kids take that many steps. This repeats until they are close enough, and Mr. Fox shouts “Midnight!” The kids turn and run while Mr. Fox gives chase, trying to catch as many as he can.

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Red Rover

Separate the group into two teams, (Team A and Team B) each team forming a straight line. Someone from Team B is called over to ‘bust through’ the arms of two people from Team A. If they are successful, they go back to their Team B line. If they fail, they become part of Team A.