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Griffin Daily News
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Griffin High varsity cheerleaders for 1971-72 are (1-r) Jeannie Ogletree, Claire Lindsey, Shelia
Skelton (captain), Kathy Passmore, Rhonda Cook, Janice Brown, Frances Moore, Kim Hunt,
Beverly Gaissert, and Evelyn Kendall. The team was selected in competition by out of town
cheerleading judges. Miss Andrea Eason is the GHS advisor.
Attend ---
Revival Services *
Edward Street
Baptist Church ■HbJH
(One Block Off Hamilton Blvd.)
Services Nightly 7:30
® 7 Ronald Presley
Wymon Brown, Pastor Evangelist
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Thursday, April 8,1971
16
Georgia Teenager
Here’s Cappy
A Fayette County High School
Junior, Capricia Lynn “Cappy”
Munday, is still not quite sure
how she became Miss Georgia
Teenager, but one thing is for
sure; she’s happy about it.
“I just came home one day
from school and mom told me
that someone had called from
where I sometimes model
clothes and suggested that I
enter”, she told them all right,”
Cappy said.
Beauty and teen contests
were not new to Cappy but she
had never won one, however, her
mother had been Miss South
Carolina and a third runner-up
in the Miss America com
petition.
“Each contestant had to give
a speech about ‘what’s right
with America’ at a luncheon
with the judges”, when it came
my turn, I couldn’t remember
what I was supposed to say,”
she admitted.
A cheerleader and life guard,
Cappy has a brother Chris (he
was born the day after
Christmas) 18 and a sister,
Monica, two.
“When I got back to school
after the contest, I could feel
everyone looking to see if I had
changed. Now I hope I’ve
proved I haven’t,” she added.
If success hasn’t changed
Cappy Munday, it has at least
changed her life.
“Now I can’t wear my blue
jeans around just anywhere any
more and mom won’t let me
hang around up stairs in my
pajamas,” she explained.
Also Cappy’s boyfriend Glen
Ward has had to make a few
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“Cappy” Munday
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Curfew enables girl
to avoid date trouble
By PAT And MARILYN DAVIS
Copley News Service
Dear Pat and Marilyn:
You are always telling
everyone to double date. You
point out all the advantages.
You say making out is kept at a
minimum, conversational
responsibility cut in half, and
that it is easier to stay out of
every type of trouble.
Let me tell you my side. My
boyfriend and I double dated
with Jim and Susie last
Saturday. We started out to a
show and ended up parked on a
dark road because Susie had
seen the show. Jim and Susie
were in front and their actions
were unbelievable. I was too
embarrassed to even look at
my boyfriend. Finally, I said I
had a curfew and must go
home. I realized it was early
but couldn’t think of any other
excuse. Now every time Susie
sees me at school, she says,
“There’s the 11 o’clock curfew
kid.” I’m afraid no one will
ever ask me out again if she
continues. Did I handle this
badly’
Ruth
Dear Ruth:
You indeed ran into double
trouble on this double date.
However, don’t judge everyone
by this particular couple. First
rate boys do not object to
curfews. A girl who can be
picked up and dropped off at
any old time does not put much
value on her company. You
handled a sticky situation with
maturity, and I’m certain your
changes. «
“It’s like being in competition
with the whole world,” he said.
Cappy, 17, had, until recently
planned to attend the University
of Georgia and major in
dramatics after high school, but
now things may be different.
“I have a chance now to go to
modding school, which may be
a better way for me to get into
acting,” the 5-5, brunette said.
What does Cappy do while
she’s not attending other Miss
Teenager functions or helping
to open supermarkets or ap
pearing on television? Would
you believe playing basketball?
“If I make the team next
year, it will be the first year I’ve
ever played and I think I’ll love
it,” she exclaimed.
The hazeled-eyed senior-to-be
serves on Fayette High’s
student council, is a member of
the “F” club, and an active
member of the Peachtree City
Presbyterian Church.
To the amusement of some
and the chagrin of others,
Cappy voiced her thoughts on
Women’s Liberation:
“I think they (liberationists)
are making too big a thing out of
it. We are the weaker sex, and
I’m happy with things the way
they are now.”
popularity will not suffer.
Dear Pat and Marilyn:
My sister is going to drive me
mad. She is 10 years old and a
real pest. Whenever I have a
boyfriend over, she plays Agent
007 and spies on me.
She has even waited up until
11 o’clock to see if he gives me a
kiss. My parents think this is
cute. I do not. My social life will
screech to a standstill if I
cannot stop this spy activity.
What can I do?
Lena
Dear Lena:
Talk with your parents.
Explain to them just how
embarrassing it is to have an
audience. Then talk with your
sister — friend to friend. At 10,
she has more to do than spy bn
others. Tell her just how your
boyfriend reacts and what it is
doing to your social life. I think
you can win her over.
Dear Pat and Marilyn:
I am 21 years old, have a
good job and still live at home.
My problem is that I would like
to move into an apartment.
When I mention this to my
parents, they reject the idea
and say that I am too young.
Mom and dad have always
been strict. Yet, I have always
tried to be considerate and not
cause them to worry.
Many of my friends have
apartments and seem to get
along quite well. My salary is
such that I would have no
problems financially. My
parents said they would con-
Pocahontas was
spoiled by dad
Pocahontas was something
else. She did all the right things
at all the wrong times and
became a legend.
She was a spoiled teen-ager
and the apple of her father’s
eye. Since her father happened
to be Powhatan, powerful chief
of the Algonkians, Pocahontas
had special privileges.
She often took advantage of
these privileges to aid the white
settlers of Jamestown. This
was embarrassing to her
father, who regarded these
men as enemies.
Very few of- the Indians
called Pocahontas by her real
name, Matakoa. Her
nickname, given to her by her
father, meant “playful little
girl.” Her face was interesting
rather than pretty. She wore
her long, straight, black hair
hanging down her back. In
clined to be a tomboy, she often
showed off before her chums by
doing cartwheels. At )3, she
was a law unto herself.
Entering her teens,
Pocahontas began feeling her
oats. When a man named John
Smith from the nearby fort of
Jamestown was captured by
the Algonkians, Powhaten
decided to adopt him. It was an
old Indian custom.
Two Indians threw the
captive to the tent floor and
stood over him with mock
gestures of menace. Powhatan
was then supposed to step
forward, as foster-father, and
“save” the white man’s life.
Powhatan didn’t want to
commit himself quite that
much so he appointed
Pocahontas as his stand-in.
This substitution lifted
Pocahontas right out of that
tent into history.
On a warm spring day in
April, 1613, when she was 18,
Pocahontas was kidnaped by a
settler and held in Jamestown
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sider your advice.
Cindy
Dear Cindy:
First of all, you should be
happy to have parents who
care. Moving into an apart
ment is a big step for you, as
well as for your parents.
If you do have a good job and
can support yourself, I see no
reason why you should not
move. Most young people want
to begin a life of their own. But
do remember to visit mom and
dad often. They will appreciate
it.
Dear Pat and Marilyn:
I am 16 years old and over
weight. I feel very conspicuous
and ugly when everyone else I
know wears a size 9 and I am
rolling around in an 18. I have
tried every diet known to
mankind. The problem is I get
so hungry and just can’t stay
with it. I weigh at least 30
pounds more than I should and
I am completely out of shape.
How can I muster the
willpower to lose?
Fatty
Dear Fatty:
No one can give you a magic
formula that will erase 30
pounds overnight. It took time
to put that much weight on and
it will take time to get it off.
Crash or fad diets are not the
answer. Check with your
doctor. He can tell you whether
or not the problem is
overeating. He will give you a
diet and it is up to you to follow
it. Good luck.
as a hostage. The ransom price
was permanent peace between
her father and the white man.
Pocahontas couldn’t have
cared less. She was the center
of attraction. She learned the
English language and was
finally converted to
Christianity. When baptized,
she was given the name
Rebecca.
Next year the teen-aged
Indian princess met a young
widower named John Rolfe.
Today, Fit, Sat.
Double Feature
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