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) Set limit
| on girl’s
spending
By DR. WILLARD
| ABRAHAM
Copley News Service
| Q. To listen to my wife and
I daughter talk you’d think I
| was made of money! Our girl
has no limits set on her spend
ing (she’s 13), and she’ll prob
| ably end up with the same
I feelings her mother has re
| lated to the world owing her a
living. I do pretty well finan
cially, but I have a feeling
I that children should learn
I something about money and
' how to use it with discretion.
Do you agree?
A. Yes, of course, and since
I your daughter has two par
ents, one of them — you —
' might set some realistic
limits on her spending. How
ever, it isn’t easy if the par
-1 ents’ attitudes toward money
I differ as much as yours and
| your wife’s apparently do.
It's a little late to condition
Iyour wife in this area, al
though the subjects of budget
ing and allowances are fair
game for you to discuss with
both of the women in your
house.
I If you’re the only wage
earner in the family, you have
I a lot more power, in your
hands than you seem to recog
nize.
Q. I can't get over the fact
| that our husky 16-year-old
won’t play football. He’ll get
into everything else — swim
i ming, baseball, tennis,
basketball, but whenever
| football comes up, it’s just
plain, “No!”
I like the game and always
. have. My husband thinks it’s
great, and was a star in both
| high school and college. We
watch every game we can on
television.
I It’s such a great sport.
I What’s the matter with our
I son?
A. It doesn't take a deep
psychiatric study to come up
1 with one possibility. You and
I your husband may have over
| whelmed him with your en
thusiasm. It’s probably time
to lay off for a while.
i If it doesn’t offend you too
I much, isn’t there really room
I for some other sports inter
ests in your son’s life? It
sounds to me as though his in
i terests are considerably
I broader than yours are.
Q. He’s scared to death of
going to the dentist, and I
i don’t know what to do about it.
I You’d think that a 10-year-old
I kid would be able to take it in
stride, but he certainly can’t.
He’s too big for me to drag in.
i What should I do?
A. If this is his first visit and
' the dentist is a specialist with
children, perhaps you should
arrange for the two of you to
I go to his office just for a visit.
I No work, not even x-rays the
I first time.
If he has gone to the dentist
before, or if he refuses to go
i with you, then you need some
other help. It can come
' through the school nurse, his
teacher, or the school
psychologist. The school li
brarian might be helpful too.
It’s obvious that something
I or someone tossed this fear
into him. It is less important
to dig into who or why than to
find out how to get him there
before he has a tooth problem.
Some children’s dentists
may have an idea or two to
share with you. I’ll let you
know what they write in.
Letters may be sent to Our
Children, Copley News Serv
ice, in care of this newspaper.
Questions of general interest
will be answered in the col
umn as space permits.
What kind of parent am I?
Am I realistic in what I expect
from my children? Send
|. stamped return envelope to
Dr. Abraham, P.O. Box 572,
Scottsdale, Arizona 85252 for
information.
Fight lost
NEW YORK (UPI) - Resi
dents of the Croyden Hotel, who
tried to prevent the hotel’s
owners from making improve
ments because they said they
would not be able to afford the
higher rents that would follow,
have lost their fight.
Manhattan Supreme Court
Justice Margaret Mangan ruled
Tuesday the owners were doing
nothing illegal by renovating
the 17-story Manhattan hotel.
The tenants had argued
cutbacks in service were
designed to drive them out, but
the court said despite some
cutbacks, services for the 110
residents were adequate.