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Show al i ii Seah: 3% LEARN FLOWER ARRANGING and floristry st home. Turn your love of flowers into # profitable and satisfying business, pert or full time. Many excellent moneymaking opportunities. You lean at home fren easy-to-resd and fully illustrated lessons. Training kits included. Certificate award: for FREE tooklet. Lifetime Career STANDARD DIAL PHONES $9.95 — Save extra steps and rental charges with these Your Dreams Tell How Creative You Are By JOHN E. GIBSON postage each phone. Telco, Dept. FW2-4, 887 Second Avenue, N.Y. 10017. OW creative are you? To find out, analyze Here is what your answers actually mean: your dreams, says psychologist Joseph Adelson of the 1. Professor Adelson found that creative students had something funny happen to them in 17 percentof their dreams. The non- University of Michigan. Professor Adelson and his associates long suspected that the dreams of creative persons differed from those of noncreative people, so they put their theory to a clinical test. Two groups of college students were selected: one group had displayed high creative ability, the other had not. Each morning the students were questioned about the previous night’s dreams. The final results proved that the dreams of the creative students were markedly different from the dreams of the others. Here is a seven-question test designed to analyze your dreams and determine your creativity. jren's gov't surplus. Great fun! $2.95 ppd. ., Dept. FW2-4,333 East 50th St.,N.Y. 10022, U.S. MED. CORPS STETHOSCOPE. Hard to find, and usually expensive, this brand-new surplus . Students, etc., perfect for teaching children, adults, all about the respiratory system. Great fun, costs less than a toy! Solid buy at $2.95 ppd. (1/3 gov't cost). Gerard, Dept. FW2-4, 333 East 50th Street, New York. N.Y, 10022 1. Do you ever experience comic dreams? 2. Do your dreams take place in a familiar setting or in some unusual place? 3. Could your dreams really happen, or are they just physicaliy impossible? 4. Do you appear in your dreams as yourself or as a heroic character—such as a great explorer, football star, exotic princess, or movie actress? 5. Do yuur dreams shift scenes, or are they confined to one place? 6. Are the characters in your dreams hazy or distinct? 7. Do youparticipate in the action of your dreams? creative group reported no hu- morous dreams. 2. The dreams of the noncreative students were bound to familiar places and to the present. In the case of the creative group, the dream locales ranged from Paris to a steaming jungle. In most of their dreams, the main character was imaginary. 3. The creative group frequently had bizarre and physically impossible dreams. The other group rarely had them. 4. Noncreative students dreamed of themselves as they are, never varying. The creative students, on the other hand,pic- tured themselves veing married to someone they were in love with or being famous. 5. With the creative subjects, there were many ¢ifferent settings within a single dream, a constant shifting of locale. The dreams of the noncreative group took place generally in a single setting. 6. The creative students tended to see other persons clearly in their dreams. Dream characters for the noncreative students were hazy and indistinct. 7.In 20 percent of their dreams, the creative students were not personally involved; they merely stcod by as observers. The noncreative subjects always were personally involved. © ILLUSTRATION BY JOHN HUEHNERGARTH % Family Weekly, February 4, 1968 |