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A Little Surprise For the Prize-Giver

VIDEO | 'Happy Springtime'
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So does Lego endorse --

"We do not endorse her message," says Stern, who says the company didn't think it could renege on an 8-year-old. "But we do applaud her creative spirit . . . and her message of peace."

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Incidentally, Kelsie did not write "Happy Springtime," though she is a budding composer. Her work at Willie Mae's Rock Camp for Girls in New York this summer, says her dad, led counselors to suggest she apply for a Creativity Award. Sample catchy lyrics she penned at camp: "Feeling Rock-i-fide! Feeling good inside!"

The credit for "Springtime" goes to Kelsie's dad, musician-activist Brett Kimberlin.

Remember that guy who said during the 1988 election that he'd peddled pot at a Burger Chef to a dude named Danny Quayle? That was Brett. His Quayle revelation came from the clink, where he was serving time for a series of Indiana bombings, one of which wounded a Vietnam veteran. Kimberlin always contended he wasn't guilty of the bombings and would have been paroled earlier, except for the government machine trying to keep him quiet about Quayle, who said he never had met the man.

Championed by "Doonesbury's" Garry Trudeau and the New Yorker's Mark Singer, who wrote a 22,000-word article on him, Kimberlin was released in 1993. He moved to Bethesda to live with his mom, had two kids and recorded "Happy Springtime."

In Lennon's original, the Harlem Community Choir provided backup vocals. For the "Springtime" takeoff, Kelsie recruited kids from the World Children's Choir, a McLean chorus focusing on making cross-cultural connections, of which she's a member. Sixteen children, 7 to 14, thought they'd like to sing about peace, and named themselves the Harmonic Angels.

The other kids (and their parents) have been nothing but harmonic and angelic in supporting Kelsie's windfall.

"We said, 'Oh, that's so cool!' " says Diane Hinson, whose daughter, Robin, sings in the choir.

"Springtime" is not the Kimberlins' only father-daughter collaboration. Brett also enlisted the Harmonic Angels to sing in an antiwar reworking of Pink Floyd's "Another Brick in the Wall." (Kelsie and the Angels do not appear in "Exile," a music video in which Brett underwent waterboarding as an "it's definitely torture" argument.)

"All of the kids in the choir are very liberal," says Brett Kimberlin. "They wouldn't do this if they weren't in the cause."

Kelsie agrees. "I don't like Bush because he sends people to be killed," she says. And FYI, her younger sister Karina already knows all of the words to "Happy Springtime." She's 3.

So what is Kelsie planning to do with her $5,000? Record more songs, of course. Says her father, "She was just saying, 'Dad, I want you to learn this Hannah Montana song and then write the lyrics for it.' "


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