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Mon.. Feb. 13, 1961
Pa t
Getting Child
To Bed Solved
By This Example
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (API "How can I
get my child to go asleep?"
Millions of parents have raised
this cry. In some neighborhoods
1 where there are a lot of kids
this can be a bigger problem than
the mortgages.
But what grownup cannot de
feat a child ii he puts his mind
to it?
It is really very simple. You
want the child to go to sleep at
a certain time, but it decides it
doesn't want to.
Let us assume that you and
your wife are going out for thu
evening. You have a daughter
named Mary Anne, aged below
10, and a teen-age baby sitter
named Gloria has been hired to
subdue her.
The whole idea is that Gloria
is to get Mary Anne in bed by
8:30 p.m. "at the very latest."
Naturally, your wife is aware of
the problem early in the day. And
she attacks it early. She wakes
Mary Anne an hour before usual
and puts her through a stiff course
of Zen-Buddhism exercises.
After school your wife meets
Mary Anne and takes her ice skat
ing or for a ballet lesson. Any
thing to wear the child down.
When you leave for the evening,
you tell Gloria, "Don't let her
watch violent TV shows about
people in trouble. Either shu
won't pay any attention to them,
or else she'll be scared awake.
"Let her see a show about an
animal in trouble, and then she'll
cry herself tired before she is sure
the animal is going to come out
okay. She doesn't yet know that on
television an animal never loses."
So you come home at 11:39
p.m. and there is little Mary
Anne, wide-eyedly watching the
I late movie, and Gloria, her baby
I sitter, sitting up in a chair sound
asleep, her weekend algebra les
son unsolved in her hand.
So you borrow the money from
your wife to pay off Gloria, and
you take her home, and when you
return there is your daughter say
ing. "I'm hungry."
You feed her, and she coaxes,
"Please, can't I just this once
stay up and see the rest of the
movie? It's Friday."
"Sure," you tell her, "stay up
as long as you want to. But your
mommy and I are going to sleep
now."
If you carry out this threat,
within five minutes there is a
plaintive cry, "I'm sleepy. I want
to go to bed."
Children are great parent herd
ers. And they are quick to follow
tne sneep of their choice to the
pastures of drowse.
It is really very simple.
If parents want a child to go to
sleep, all they have to do is to
go to sleep first.
The child will follow without
trouble.
International
Paper Official
Still Eyes Site
SALEM (AP) A nnVc
I for International Paper Co. said
a site near r.nrAina w
is tne prime one under consirinr.
ation for the romiuni'i nt
paper mill in the Pacific North
west. The statement was issued to put
aside fears that the company
might not build at lh ciil
if the legislature gassed two
special bills necessary to the use
of the site.
The spokesman said the Gard
iner site on the Southern nr....
.coast "is under active consider-
auon.
"In fact," he said "r.,,.
is considered the choice location."
rreious announcements saiH ih
company expected in ... -n..
employ sotne m mcn a( g pant
"However." thp l.
sain, "favnrahltt
i - , ,a,-ivii -on me
legislation whirh hne j lL
Oregon House of Representatives
and is now pending in the Senate
IS a necessarv nrorAn,
decision by the company."
" io diiis would permit the
company an easement In r,.n .
waste pipe out to sea over state
owned beach land and to raise the
water levels of Kilt,. -j t-l
kenitch lakes.
The comDanv.trwiLncm..
that Without thp lpnicl... .u
,can be no mill at Gardiner.
FACES SENTENCING
LOS ANGELES it:pn i.
saxophonist Art Pepper. 33, faces
sentencing March 8 on his guilty
plea to a charee of
heroin. Peooer uhn .m.-j .u.
plea in court Thursday, was st-
.:-i-.-u uei. -ib uy police.
Hobby Suppl,,,, mhi TiU
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