Houston daily journal. (Perry, GA) 2006-current, November 25, 2006, Image 33

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iw m JjpaflßglEj c#! fe. ./* f^& # ffi*g****^trr’’***-**»it * tt* *** V* >.*?“- Entertainment icons of the 1960 s get together: Linkletter with Arthur Godfrey, Lucille Bail and Gary Morton time soon —a point driven home when he politely excuses himself to take a phone call to discuss a solar power plant he is building in Nevada, only one of several business irons he has in the fire. “He does all the right things,” says Dr. Gary Small, author of The Longevity Bible , who has known Linkletter for 10 years through their work together at the Center on Aging at the University of Cali fornia-Los Angeles, for which Linkletter serves as president. “He is engaged, he is physically and mentally active, and he has a positive outlook.” Linkletter has co-authored his own new book on aging, Hou to Make the Rest of Your Life the Best of Your Life , with Mark Victor Hansen, the co-creator of the famous Chicken Soup for the Soul series. When Hansen approached Linkletter with the idea for a book, he initially was not receptive. “I said, ‘No thanks, Mark,'” Linkletter recalls. "‘I have written 27 books, including Old Age is Not for Art Linkletter with wife Lois in Los Angeles in 2006 [MBk - JfPIL rmH a?, -‘"I: 1 nfiH dliil j§ I f jSKiNiIGr JS □ YES! Please send me the Hometown Cookbook for only $14.95 I i j J Name j » I • Address • i l i City State i i i J Zip Phone ( ) j ! Send check/money order for J $19.90 ($14.95 + $4,95 s/h) to i American Profile Cookbook, 341 Cool Springs i | Blvd., Suite 400, Franklin, TN 37067 or | Call 1-800-851-5284 or i Visit www.americanprofile.com/store i [ EXPIRES 12/31/06 CA. TN. IL. AR and NY residents add state | i sales tax NSF checks automatically debited for amount of check | i plus applicable fees Please allow 3-4 weeks for delivery 48 i Sissies. 1 don’t need the money and I have nothing more to say. " But when Hansen pointed out that baby boomers—getting older every day—needed sage advice, Linkletter changed his mind. Mv life has been a series of accepting chal lenges,” he says. Among those challenges has been the loss of two of his five children. His son Robert died in an automobile accident in 1980. and his 20-year-old daughter, Diane, jumped out of the window of her kitchen apartment under the influence of LSD in 1969. ”1 had a call immediately from Norman Vincent Peale, my friend, my mentor,” following Diane's death, Linkletter recalls. “He said. Art, the Lord is calling you to help the families of America in what is a growing epidemic." So Linkletter walked away from television and turned his energies to a passionate anti-drug cru sade. He spoke at churches, on radio and TV, and wrote the book Drugs at My Doorstep. Linkletter currently is facing the loss of yet another of his children. His 69-year-old son Jack has been undergoing treatment for mantle cell lymphoma. "His chances of living are slender,” Linkletter says. "The Lord only lends our children to us. I have learned from these tragedies that these experiences leave you either enhanced or diminished as a person. My choice is to help other people.” A young entrepreneur Linkletter was born out of wedlock in a small hospital in Moose Jaw. Saskatchewan, Canada, where he was abandoned by his biological parents and adopted by John Linkletter. a street preacher, -II 1 \mvmhvfifr L Hometown Cookbook] .At \u . *?■ \n. « ; f\AinS-Vi »V V., H* lfl 1 r j ft? >4 »" :■ t :i . ■ • Nii-. \* 'n* l ’-'- j I Great Hometown Cooks Reveal | Recipe Secrets! THIS DELICIOUS OFFER IS RACK BY POPULAR DEMANDI j IN THIS TREASURY YOU GET: • 425 kitchen-tested, easv-to-prepare recipes! ‘AU the recipes I've tried have been very • 16-page insert with full-color photos successful, easy to mahe^smell lirvine • Ideas for instant family favorites! and yummy to devour. • Many mouth-watering recipes with six Deimlt. Rrotrum. WY ingredients or less! CI l YGI RCOP\ Ol VMKRtCAN PROFII 1 lIOMI TOW \ COOKBOOK B: l 3 | On TV’s Toast of the Town with Ed Sullivan in 1954 and his wife, Mary. They were loving parents, but poor, living on congregational offerings. After moving around Canada for a while, they relocated to Lowell, Mass., and then to California. Even as a young boy, Linkletter was a hustling, bus tling entrepreneur with an assortment of odd jobs, including selling lemons door to door. He worked at various ventures noastop until he graduated from high school—after skipping several grades—at the age of 16. "1 wanted to go to college, but I had no money," he says. "So I decided to see the world. 1 was very adept at hitchhiking, so I said gixxlbye to my parents and never lived with them again.” (Continued on page 12)