ri TilfeS •"•"ff^T * v rk*r •* v * |̂ws*" *"Nr*. - v. ; * * &$*• : •.,.- ^.v'.-iT •v^».-k., "< * PG. 4 - PLAINDEALER - WED. JULY 9, 1969 . A pit in the moraine near Harvard. Unsorted material prove ice to be the erosional agent. DISTRICT IS OFFERS OUTDOOR SUMMER SCHOOL Mc Henry School District 15 is again offering a class in out door education as part of the summer school program. This five week session, from June 16 through July 18, is fund ed by ESEA (Elementary Sec ondary Education Act)--titleJ. casts Cpr personnel, trans portation and materials are 100 fcer cent reimburseable from Federal Funds. -I The participants work in the classroom laboratory as well aS in nature's laboratory. Work centers around science, social Science and applied mathemat ics. . Informal instruction on trips add in the field is supplemented by classroom demonstration, lectures and student laboratory explorations. To record the summer's ac tivities, students will be using photography. They have already begun developing the film and printing the pictures of the first three trips to Kankakee and Coal City, the Harvard-Moraine area, Algonquin gravel pit, and 3?oyal Oaks Museum in Crystal Isake. I" The first trip on Wednesday, June 18, allowed them to study sedimentary rocks, with fos sils, along the Kankakee river. The students also observed plant and animal life common to that area. Hunting fossils west of Coal City was a new experience. As they dug through the huge piles of mat erial removed from hundred- foot depths, the young people were delighted to find an oc casional rock nodule contain ing a fern fossil. These had been deposited when central Illinois was a gigantic bog or marsh. The moraine south and east of Harvard gave an opportun ity to stuoy two drainage ba sins, one with an eastward, and the other with a westward flow. East of Harvard they dis covered huge cavities in the moraine that were formed when blocks of ice melted about 10,000 years ago. While travel ling toward Hebron, they found evidence of fertile soil having been deposited by water that melted from the same glacier. At Algonquin, the glacial mat erial was found sorted and de posited in layer, or regions, by water rather than by ice. The great variety of rock types gave evidence of rocks mixed together from many points of origin. '- The roundness and smoothness showed that na ture's erosional agents were at work for thousands of years to produce this shape and form. At Royal Oaks Museum they were treated to a lesson in ear ly Americana given by Mr. Andreas. He demonstrated an early Edison type phonograph with its large horn and sleeve- type record. He explained, and showed how early Illinois re»^ idents had to provide for them selves. The large samples of homemade wood and metal farm and home implements, furniture and clothing moved the students backward in time more than 100 years. On display was a rare horse-drawn mail delivery coach complete with driver's uniform and mail from that per iod. Besides these out-door trips, they have been busy with the microscope, developing tanks, contact-printers and photo dry ers. The lessons learned were photographed by students and teachers. This perhaps will be more meaningful and longer lasting than conventional class room work. In "Our Time . . • The two previous editions of IN OUR TIME have obviously left a few people confused, both to the general intent of such ,a column and over definitions which I have used. This week I will attempt to clear-up any confusion which the reader might have. The original intent of IN OUR TIME was to give satisfactory answers to those questions which lie in the minds of many. These answers, primarily, were to be given from that point- of-view so commonly held by our young people. They-were MEANT to bring controversy and rebuttal! Truthfully, I was shocked, yet proud that the ONLY rebuttal should come "from my brother who is pres ently stationed in Florida. It bothers me that nothing came from those more closely con cerned. Now, I will attempt to ans wer some of the questions which were asked in last week's "Pub lic Pulse." To begin with, Vietnam is but a small point in the problem which was put forth. The im morality of fighting in South east Asia is not the fact that we are helping to stagnate Com munist aggression, rather it is the hopelessness and the frus tration in which Americans find themselves. The war, as has been so aptly pointed out, is killing many of our men. Does it make good sense when there are so many important problems being left unsolved at home? There are, I might point out, many veterans who firmly take this stand. Granted, there are many "phorjy flower children". But it should also be agreed that there are many genuine peace lovers. The younger generation, for the most part,, is more sin cerely concerned with, and more anxiously dedicated to constructively solve some of the incongruences which have been found in our governmental structure. They are more ear nest, yet more frustrated than any previous generation. "False nationalistic pride" is also a real problem. My failure to communi cate the prop er meaning to this phrase has been accidentally answered by Mr. Decatur's quoted state ment, "My country, in her in tercourse with other nations may she always be right, but right or wrong, my country." This is where the SEEMINGLY NEW wave of thought begins: The young people I speak of are proud of their U.S, cit izenships in good times or bad, right moves or wrong. But, when the government of this country is wrong, then many young peo ple find this " wrong" impos sible tosi9port.Ifthis "wrong" is protested, and if the demon strators believe that change is necessary, are they, therefore,, any less patriotic? Will a par ent support his child if that child has sinned? No, the par ent will try to change that child's attitude. The young people to day are only different from those past in that they place right and truth above such un warranted nationalism. * I know of few young people who support the extremest movement to bring socialism to the United States. I acknow ledge the fact there are those who support Hanoi and MaoTse Tung, but they are rotten apples in a truly great bushel. There are few who expect change to come over night, but they do expect change to come, somehow. ~ Concerning campus protest; whatever happened to those who believed that, "The principle of isometrics is that you can build muscle by pushing against an unyielding object. You'can build character and bring change the same way."? Wasn't this na tion formed by great rpen who wanted change? They, too, wore long hair. MARINE FESTIVAL LIST OF EVENTS SUNDAY, JULY 13 -- Water Fights -- City Beach --1:30 p.m. THURSDAY, JULY IT -- Family Night -- City Park -- 7:30 p.m. FRIDAY, JULY 18 -- Square Dance -- City Park -- 8 p.m. SATURDAY, JULY 19 -- " \ All-America Sidewalk Sale -- 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. Marine Festival Dance -- yFW Clubrooms 9 p.m. SUNDAY, JULY 20 -- Miss America luncheon -- Country Club 11:30 a.m. Marine Festival Parade -- 2 p.m. Water Ski Show -- City Beach -- 4:15 p.m. Drum Corps Magic Show -- McCracken ^ Field -- 7 p.m. |lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllimillllllllllU§ Kiwahis member Art Lau is | . mr 1 attending the club's Internation- MKlWaniS Dlews i al Convention at Miami this 5 : • £ week. V WONDER LAKE CLUB Wonder Lake Kiwanis pres ident Ward Ehredt supervised seventeen local Boy Scouts at their camp in Lowden. Another Kiwanis member said of the president.."He tried to prove he is as young as he feels. Al though he went over the ob stacle course, his time is not for publication. Ihis was his fourth trip to Lowden. Wonder Lake Boy Scouts are lucky to have such a devoted Scout Lea der." Baseball night at Milwaukee will be Wednesday, August 13. Arrangements are being made by the Kiwanis for a bus to leave at 5:45p.m. Read yeur ilBLI dolly and OO TO CHURCH SUNDAY NOW. . .TWICE THE FURNITURE. . .PLUS FANTASTIC SAVINGS AT EITHER LOCATION !! FREE PRIZE TO EVERY ADULT (Over 18) at Each Location! Wed., Thura., FrL, Sat. * Son. Only! * Main Store Honrs: :S0 a.m. 'til 9:00 p.m. Weekdays! LICENSE DEADLINE Only a little more than a week remains for owners of most trucks and other second divison vehicles to display the new fiscal year license plates on their vehicles. Midnight, July 15, is the deadline for having the 1969-1970 plates mounted on the vehicles, he said. At present, registration totals a- bout 385,000 of an expected 965,000. 9:80 a.m. 'til 5:80 p.m Saturday 12 noon 'til 5:80 p.m Sunday! * Draw Dally loo's Of Places! No Cost No Obligation! 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If more parents realize this, dinner table problems would be reduced. Children are born with a fifth sense concern ing dietetics that we should cul tivate, not criticize. Eating hab its vary with each stage of de velopment... During the first year a child shows preference for certain foods. If allowed, he may select edibles that satisfy particular needs. Dry toast and crackers when teething, meats and cheese after molars appear. After twelve months, he be comes choosy and independent. This stage must be understood to avoid frustration and worry, as the child settles down to the slower pace of being less hun gry while more selective... Parents should encourage, not suppress, the child's inde pendence, by letting him pom- Ms own milk and finger his food. This is not neglecting his man ners! Children learn by ex ample, and in time adopt the taold .nannex n oi the parents... Adopt the habit of having your prescriptions filled by BOLGER'S DRUG STORE 1259 N. Green..Phone 385-4500. 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