Christmas Seal Drive Opens _coin PAGE 7 . PLAINDEALER - WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 1«, 19TJ EXPLORING 4-H is open to younger members these days and through new materials called Exploring donated by the McHenry County 4-H foun dation, clubs now have in novative project material to introduce these 8, 9, and 10- year-olds to the vast world of 4- H. Exploring was developed by the University of Wisconsin Extension service. It includes an attractive packet for the youngster containing a series of posters designed to be com pleted at home with his family. Accompanying the packet is a leaders' guidebook with suggested club activities. The posters are attractively designed in bold letters and line McHenry county's "brumal Christmas Seal Campaign, the main support for the wprk of the DuPage-McHenryr Lung association, opened mficially Nov. 12 after 40,000 local families and business houses received their Christmas Seal "The wonderful volunteer appeal letters. ""x *help we receive throughout the Henry B. Harper, Crystal /year helps us keep fund raising Lake, first vice-president of the ' costs low," Harper Lung association assemble the Christmas Seal letters for mailing. M. Kendall Bird, Crystal Lake, serves as Christmas Seal chairman for McHenry county. association, said that this year's seals were designed by the children of America. The design of the Illinois seal was submitted by a third grade student from Argo public schools. Eight and Forty salon and American Legion auxiliary members provided 700 volunteer hours to help the costs low," Harper said. "Christmas Seal contributions and memorial gifts are used by the Lung association for medical research and services to patients with breathing problems such as emphysema, asthma and chronic bronchitis. This summer, we have plans for a camp for asthmatic children." Harper added that child- oriented anti-smoking programs are being carried out by association staff in the lower grades, and that anti-smoking programs are also conducted in junior high and high schools and for adult groups in both counties. Lung capacity tests are given at various health fairs free of charge and are also provided for industrial workers. For information regarding the loan bank of breathing machines maintained for patients, inquiries may be directed to DuPage-McHenry Lung association board member Loretta Kohl, RN, in Woodstock at 338-6675. / by Gerry Johnson Survives Tests of Character Fifth Annual College Fair Slated Nov. 18-19 personal interests, an awareness of his community, his natural environment and his world. Titles are My Family, Where I Live, This Is Me, More Me, Me and 4-H, Something With a Partner, Alive Things, and Non Living Things. Club activities coordinated to follow the patterns set by the members activities include Create a Creature day, Bake a Giant Pizza day, Me and 4-H day, Junk Food day and Animal day, among others. At the completion of Ex ploring, members are then hopefully better prepared to choose regular 4-H projects from the more than a hundred available to them. Enrollment is now open in country clubs for youth 8-19. For more in formation, contact the University of Illinois Extension service at 11909 McConnell road, Woodstock. UNDERSTANDING MENTAL HEALTH 0 health column from tbi Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental Health Administration U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare Teadtdng Mothers How To Mother While most "do-it-yourself kits" come with detailed in structions, parenthood does not And, although child rearing may depend in part on good intuition, it appears from • High school and college age students and-or their parents are invited to attend the fifth annual Chicago National college fair Friday, Nov. 18 -19, at Expocenter-Chicago. Representatives from 330 colleges, universities and career schools will be on hand from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. until 10 p.m. Friday and from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Saturday to talk to visitors. Visitors may talk in dividually with counselors and college admissions officers about entrance requirements, costs, financial aid, possible majors, careers and college entrance testing. Also, each visitor will receive a copy of the fair directory, which includes much in formation to be used in future college planning. A computer terminal will be available for people to use in exploring colleges and careers suitable to their interests and needs. The fair will be sponsored by the National Association of College Admissions Coun selors, a non-profit educational association serving college admissions and financial aid officers and high school counselors. More than half a million people have attended various college fairs sponsored by NACAC during the past five years. Parents frequently have questions about college ad missions and financial aid, but rarely have the opportunity to talk to college representatives. That opportunity will be available free to parents and their high school or college age children at the fifth annual chicago National College Fair November 18 and 19 at Expo- Center Chicago. Definition Collective bargaining: A man discussing clothes with his wife and teen-age daughter. -Changing Times. The way people deal with personal catastrophe is one of the ultimate tests of character. Take the case of 83-year-old Mrs. W. A. Salter, of Kerrville, Texas. Her life has been a series of tests ranging in degree from mild to overwhelming be ginning when she was a youngster in the Indian Ter ritory of Oklahoma during the early 1900s. "I grew up in the Choc taw Nation, Mrs. Salter told a writer from The Na tional Council on the Ag ing. "1 think my independ ent nature comes from be ing with Indians when I was young." She was independent enough at the age of eight to play football on an all- boy's team, many years be fore female athletes dreamed of equal participation with their male counterparts. During one of those games, a member of the vis iting team was impressed by how hard and well she played and struck up a con versation with her. "He was 18 and told me he was going to marry me when I grew up because he wanted a wife who knew how to play football," Mrs. Salter recalled with a laugh. "I didn't even know what getting married meant when I was eight." But at 18, the future Mr. Salter knew, and was seri ous about his proposal. He maintained contact over the years, and 17 years later, when he was 35 and she was 25, they were married. A couple of years later, with Mrs. Salter settling into her role of new mother, Mr. Salter's brother asked them to move to Kerrville where he had bought a newspaper. They went to Kerrville in 1921 where the two broth ers built the paper into a successful enterprise. Mrs. Salter's life was pleasant and predictable until she was confronted with a se ries of tragedies beginning in 1927. First, her brother- in-law became seriously ill that year, lingering until he died in 1929. Five months later, her husband died, two events large enough to plunge the strongest of peo ple into a state of perma nent despair. "Some of the local busi nessmen asked me what I wanted to do," she said. "I told them I wanted to run the newspaper. I didn't know what else to do." With no background in journalism, a mortgage to pay and an eight-year-old son to raise, Mrs. Salter set about learning the newspa per business. She proved to be an apt pupil, keeping the newspaper going through the Depression and World War II. •"I did everything there was to be done," Mrs. Salter recalled. "Either I couldn't afford to hire help or I couldn't get any. Dur ing the war, I had a young Mexican boy helping me. He fed the press and I ran the folder." When the war was over, her son Forrest joined her on the newspaper and Mrs. Salter found time for other interests. Over the years she's given many hours of her time to local civic groups and still volunteers her services when the Red Cross Bloodmobile comes to Kerrville. "I join all the groups you pay dues to," she said wryly. Now retired from the newspaper, Mrs. Salter con tinues to write a weekly col umn, choosing her subject matter from whatever nap- pens to strike her fancy. "I figure I've earned the privilege to write about lo cal history, gardening, and other personal interests," Mrs. Salter said. "And it's a privilege I intend to exercise for quite some time." » • * THE OCTOBER 13 epi sode of "The Waltons," en titled "The Warrior," con cerns the search by an el derly Indian chief and his grandson for their family's lost burial plot. When they discover it under the Wal ton's barn, viewers will be both entertained and en lightened by the handling of the situation. The pro ducers of the show would like to hear y6ur comments. Write to: Andy White-Earl Hammer c/o Lorimer Productions 4000 Warner Avenue Burbank, CA 91522 TURN ONS VWAT DO YOU MEAN/YOUR VIRILITY IS TOO HIGH? IT'S ALL IN AAV MEAD. rascorch at the Institute for Development of Human Re sources, University of Florida, that parental intuition can be ' given a substantial boost by well-timed training. The study, sponsored in 4k part by the National Institute of Mental Health, has found that young parents are more - and more interested in books on basic child development. Dr. Ira Gordon, who directs the research, attributes this to various factors. One is the fact that more and more young people no longer live near their own parents, who, pre sumably, could tell them something about child care. Also, many young parents have never handled infants before having their own. Given such isolation and in experience, they turn to the professional for guidance. Visits to the homes of the families taking part in the program showed that, in gen eral, mothers were taking care of the baby's physical needs, but usually did not talk to or play with the baby, and did not praise his or her accom plishments. In the project, mothers were taught how to catch i and hold their babies' attention and to encourage the infants to talk and engage in physical activity. At the same time they learned to / cuddle and comfort them when needed. Gordon points out that the « parent must realize that child care cannot be separated from - child development. "This means," he said, "that while you are changing a diaper, for example, you have an oppor tunity to look at your child's face and smile. While you are feeding the child, you can talk. These are not simply physical care times, they are also learning times." 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