 There
                      are two basic theories (with numerous variations) surrounding
                      the creation of good luck for the next month, the Rabbit
                      / Rabbit / Rabbit theory and the competing White Rabbit
                      / White Rabbit / White Rabbit Theory. Or is it "Bad
                      Rabbit" from England?
There
                      are two basic theories (with numerous variations) surrounding
                      the creation of good luck for the next month, the Rabbit
                      / Rabbit / Rabbit theory and the competing White Rabbit
                      / White Rabbit / White Rabbit Theory. Or is it "Bad
                      Rabbit" from England?
                  This was a big controversy
                      at the Lab (and indeed persists around the world) as the
                      theories are not only competing, but also mutually
                      exclusive. Is it good luck to repeat (like a mantra)
                      the phrase Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit as your
                      first words on the first day of the month, or should one
                      say White Rabbit, White Rabbit, White Rabbit ...
                      Or the Last utterance?  And
                      why does anyone care? Why Indeed?
                    Is
                      it carnivorous (stealing
                      others' luck) or gentle (getting
                      better luck)?  Izzy think
                      it sounds like transliterated Hebrew, meaning  "month
                      abundant" or more simply  "(have
                      a) great month".  Jan has
                      proposed no fewer than 10 Rules!  A Flemish
                      Giant buck rabbit ties it into Watership Down.  Kevin writes
                      of a tradition in the US military.  Ted quotes
                      Shakespeare.
Is
                      it carnivorous (stealing
                      others' luck) or gentle (getting
                      better luck)?  Izzy think
                      it sounds like transliterated Hebrew, meaning  "month
                      abundant" or more simply  "(have
                      a) great month".  Jan has
                      proposed no fewer than 10 Rules!  A Flemish
                      Giant buck rabbit ties it into Watership Down.  Kevin writes
                      of a tradition in the US military.  Ted quotes
                      Shakespeare.    Heather will
                      send you monthly Alerts.
Heather will
                      send you monthly Alerts.
                  It is quite amazing, but
                      a lot do care! Check out these Rabid Rabbiters ...
                      Really, if you don't find this fascinating, even alien,
                      you just might be dead.
                  How Old is This Thing?  More
                      than I bet you thought!   Pat in
                      Springfield MA tells of "a girl who worked in our
                      office at that time who practiced the tradition since the
                      early forties".  Dayle first
                      heard about this sweet superstition at sleep-away summer
                      camp in Maine about 35 years ago.   Peg tells
                      of her mother using it as a child in the late 1800's in
                      Kentucky! Gerald dates
                      it from England before 1918, and suspects it came over
                      from Normandy with William I. Dick believes
                      his father (age 86 in 2001) got it from an uncle
                      in 1922, and the uncle caught it in the First World War.
                  Location? Okinawans suspect
                      it originated in New Zealand.   Rostall heard
                      of it as a young child in Spain.  A
                      Massachusetts man in Hawaii was
                      introduced to the concept in Athens Greece from a woman
                      from St Louis in 1972. Many strands trace it to England.   Jenni in
                      Yorkshire UK says "White Rabbits, White Rabbits, Rabbits,
                      Rabbits, White Rabbits", while her mother also in
                      Yorkshire said White Rabbits just twice at New Year.
                  What is this:   or
 or   ?
                      Ask Virginia Peck!
?
                      Ask Virginia Peck!
                  The authoritative Lewiscarroll.org said of
                      this page: "White
                      Rabbit theory: This is not exactly a disease..."!
                   Books? How
                        to tell a
                        Cat from a Rabbit? Henry
                        Miller wrote of Art and Rabbits. John
                        Steinbeck wrote of Ideas and Rabbits. Then there's   The
                        Girl Who Gave Birth To Rabbits or  The
                        Woman Who Gave Birth to Rabbits (both books).   Jake
                        Gardner wrote on rabbits as predators!   Alan
                        Zweibel tells of doing "Bunny Bunny" with
                        Gilda Radner.  Dick saw "The
                        Rabbit Book", but lost it again.  Kevin half-remembers
                        a children's book as a kid. Peg half-recalls
                        an  Evelyn
                        Waugh book, and recites a neat Rabbit quote from another,   The
                        Body in the Bonfire by Katherine Hall Page.