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Show Iteration! Freedom to move. Freedom to run. Freedom to swim, to surf, to ski, to be! sixth-grade- Tampax tampons freeyou from all the old wives tales, from all the old restrictions during your period. Freedom from worry. Freedom from embarrassment. Freedom from discomfort and inconvenience. Tampax tampons are the internally worn sanitary protection. Nothing to show, nothing to irritate, nothing to keep you out of the water. And odor cant form. In sets play a recorded lecture. The classes are designed to help them avoid heart trouble in their later years. at the Lines Employing a plastic model, School learn the location of the heart, while their head- rs n i pt Hi 1 JliDLwJ by Larry Jackson BARRINGTON, ILL. ark Wenzel isn't exactly a prime candidate for a coronary. He's lithe, athletic and eats sensibly. And besides, he's only 12 years old. But hes concerned about his heart anyway. at Along with 293 other the Arnett C. Lines School here Mark is sixth-grade- rs getting a head start toward understanding his heart. And what he's learning may save his life someday. The Lines program is one of dozens of new classes being offered in schoolrooms across the nation, all with the same purpose to cut the mounting rate of heart attacks by teaching children to avoid them years in advance. the summer months of outdoor freedom, Tampax tampons are truly womens liberation! 'Dm tatwiMl protection mot nowor. bust At Northwest Community Hospital, students and principal John Snow watch lim Sturm run in place, while nurse Mary Oppenheimer uses a cardiac monitor to check pulse. MOC 18 ONLY SY TAMPAX INCOAYOSATtO. MLMCA Last year more than 750,000 Americans died from heart attacks' Mrs. Virginia Newman, program developer, tells her classes. Most could have been prevented with good eating habits and proper exercises." The classes, which are limited to the last four months of the sixth-grad- e year, begin appropriately enough about Valentine's Day. First, students prepare a list of 50 questions they hope to answer during the course. Somebody always asks if the heart chuckles really is valentine-shapeMrs. Newman, "or whether you can die of a broken heart." d' Films and field trips The 40 hours of classroom work are sprinkled with colorful films, lectures by visiting doctors and field trips to coronary care units at nearby hospitals. After learning the textbook basics, the students are given a chance to dissect animal hearts, a task they face with a cool if not unblinkingly clinical eye. To learn about human heart disease they usually examine photographs of hearts damaged by fatty cholesterol deposits and arteriosclerosis (hardening of the arteries). But during this year's class a doctor brought in a diseased human heart from an autopsy for their inspection. You mean that thing was part of a real person?" exclaimed one youngster. "Yecch!" The doctor pointed at globs of fat blocking an artery leading into the heart. "See this," he warned. "This stuff will kill you." The students nodded in approval. MASS PARADE Ur -, IT! |