Show Lets Let's Explore Your Mind Mind By DR ALBERT EUW EDWARD ARD WIGGAM J II J R lo 0 YI w 1 TO PEOPLE TO 5 5 f J KEEP EP TH THEIR IA 5 o ol o- o l 2 9 t i it 1 Ok- Ok i 1 4 e y c II I S PARENT TH It EIT TO D DANCE NcE 60 EI WOULD E O OP 1 JI Ir BETTER R. R DA J Joe E TILL D CM ON MV A UP OF iG FEET FacT INSTEAD TeAD o 01 HIE II UT IUT UT NO WONDER V IA T NEVER DANCED A H HI PARENTS PARENT S SALWA M. M FATHER THER ANDI ALWA A- A I i O WILL C CHEAT E- E DANCED S WELL DoT THAT'S WH WHY WH lOU ioU AND ID D DARE DICK DICI T ARE AAE f SUCH UCH DANCERS Yc roo 10 YOUR ouR OPINION i Address Dr Wig Wiggam gam care cars of The telegram inclosing a stamped envelop envelope I and 10 ID cents for The Art of Conversation by Milton Wright I Answer to Question No 1 1 Wouldn't it be m more re sensible to suppose Joes Joe's parents did not dance because they lacked sense of rhythm or were awkwardly built and that Joe has inherited these non dancing traits and that Dot and Dick are good dancers because their parents were born with the quail quail- q qualities ali ali- ties that make dancing easy and enjoyable This is the view that scientists have come to after 60 years of research One biologist has bred pigeons so awkward they fall over when walking and knock against things when they try to fly lYe Some families are about like that when it comes to dancing or any graceful movements Answer to Question No 2 2 We who are born talkers surely surely surely sure sure- ly do Unless a person is a particularly particularly particularly interesting talker we usually think we could be doing a Setter better job and only listen to him to be polite I find after I lecture to a group they come up and want to toS toI toi I i S do all the talking No doubt they have been bursting for a chance to talk 1 Answer to Question No S 3 Z No As they put it it moral be behavior behavior behavior be- be havior is a function of the situa situa- tion Uon Hartshorne and May in their big study of tendencies of 1 children children aged aged 9 to 14 to 14 to lie cheat and steal found that if a child cheated cheat cheat- ed on examination it was almost no indication he would cheat on the playground Children would lie about some things and be rigidly J honest about others Th The same with stealing they stealing they might steal pencils but not doughnuts etc Adults do grow into rather consistent habits of honesty and dishonesty but itis it itis itis is amazing how inconsistent we all allare allare allare are in our morality Indeed we weare weare are inconsistent to speak of morality morality moral j. j ity as though it were all aU of one piece There are numerous moralities moralities moral moral- ties and very few persons if any have all of ot them t Copyright 1938 for The Telegram |