How to avoid onion tears
Heloise
Dear Heloise: I read your “freezing onions” hint to avoid crying all over them when slicing. I use another method that I have found successful: Wet a paper towel (or several) and place them beneath the onions when slicing. This eliminates the onion fumes that cause the tearing agony. I enjoy your column in the Richmond Times-Dispatch. — Joe S., in Chester, Virginia
WOODEN KEEPSAKES
Dear Heloise: To celebrate my children’s first Christmas, I traced their little hands onto balsa wood, cut them out, and painted them. I made ornaments out of them for my Christmas tree! Now every year, the kids can see how much they have grown, and they love it! — Linda S., via email
Linda, I had a friend who did something similar on her children’s first birthday. She made wooden hands and painted the hands various colors over the years. She wrote the date in the middle of each wooden hand. She did this with all three of her children. Two years ago, her oldest son got married, and his wife has decided to do this with their children. — Heloise
SPEAKING UP ON EDUCATION
Dear Heloise: What is wrong with our schools? I understand that they no longer teach cursive writing, and some schools have stopped teaching geography. Instead of having “study hall,” why not use this time to teach geography?
Let’s extend school hours to 8 a.m.-4 p.m. I feel like our children are being shortchanged when it comes to education. We’re falling behind in science and math, while kids in China, Russia, Vietnam and other countries are moving ahead. Now that the Department of Education has been gutted, how can we improve our schools? — Ashley D., in Madison, Indiana
Ashley, the first place to start is probably with your school district. You need to start a grassroot protest with others who feel the same way you do about the “dumbing down” of education.
The underlying question is why? Why are students underperforming? Why are certain subjects not being taught? Demand answers from the school board. Write to your representatives in Congress and ask them why they stand idly by while America’s education becomes so weak and unimpressive. If you stay silent, it will only get worse. — Heloise
SWEATER SAVER
Dear Heloise: I have cashmere sweaters, many of which now have holes in them. The sweaters are stored in a plastic hanging bag with cedar sachets. Any suggestions on how to keep these expensive sweaters from being destroyed? — Wanda, via email
Wanda, first things first: The holes are likely caused from moth larvae. Dry cleaning and repairing the holes in cashmere sweaters is an expensive proposition, but it’s likely worth it.
Remove the sweaters from the plastic bags and store them in a dry, airtight container. A plastic box with a tight-fitting lid should be fine. A cedar sachet is OK, but it’s probably not pungent enough to be toxic to moths. — Heloise
SCHOOL IS IN SESSION
Dear Heloise: I’ve taught in schools since the mid-’90s, and on parent-teacher night, I always ask parents if they help their kids with their homework. Note that I said “help” — not do it for them. Parental involvement is essential, but no parent helps their children by doing their work for them. — Mrs. W., in Washington
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