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Page 5
— Griffin Daily News Wednesday, January 12,1977
I MH
I
Gift steeple
TROY, Mich.—Horst Witt and Pat Lukowski of the
Ameray Manufacturing Co., carry a shiny 20-foot white
enameled aluminum steeple which the company is
donating to the Lebanon Baptist Church in Plains, Ga. It
took parishioners nearly three years to build the church
doing most of the work themselves. But there was no
money left for the luxury of a steeple when the first
services were held last July. (AP)
Students cited for achievement
Six Griffin area students are
among those named to the fall
quarter dean’s list at the
University of Georgia.
Those cited for academic
achievement from the Griffin
area are Pamela Leigh Ellison,
a junior majoring in animal
science, pre-veterinary
medicine; Eleanor Walker
Jones, a senior horticulture
— 4gl
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Does way girls dress
drive men to rape?
By Abigail Van Buren
© 1977 by Chicago Tribune-N Y News Synd. Inc.
DEAR ABBY: It’s no wonder so many girls and women
are raped these days. They go around without bras,
wearing halters and skin-tight pants, and some of them
even leave their whole midsections bare naked. They
practically ask for it!
I’m not saying we should be easy on the rapists who
commit these terrible crimes, but the way some girls dress
I can understand how a man can be tempted beyond his
ability to control himself.
GRANDMA: GARDEN CITY, N.Y.
DEAR GRANDMA: The theory that girls “ask for it” by
the way they dress is not valid. What’s so tempting about a
10-month-old baby wearing a diaper? Or an 85-year-old
woman in a housedress?
Rapists are more interested in humiliating and
degrading a female than in satisfying themselves sexually.
Any female (of any age) will do.
One piece of advice to women on how to dress to protect
themselves against rape: Wear shoes you can RUN in.
DEAR ABBY: The continuing discussion in your column
regarding “recycled dentures” brought to mind an old
limerick, which you may have heard:
‘There was an old man of Tarentum
Who gnashed his false teeth ’till he bent ’em.
When they asked him the cost
Os what he had lost.
He replied, ‘I can’t say, for I rent 'em’.”
My research reveals that 70 years ago, British weekly
newspapers carried this advertisement: “Old artificial
teeth bought. If forwarded by post, utmost value per
return or offer made...”
So you see, Abby, what happens to old dentures has
intrigued people for a long, long time.
M.E. RING, D.D.S.
DEAR M.E.: Thanks to the editor of the Bulletin of the
History of Dentistry.
DEAR ABBY: You printed a letter recently from a
former G.I. who said he’s yet to see an Army chaplain who
would help a G.I. marry a girl who wasn’t round-eyed,
Anglo-Saxon and Christian. I agree with you; that was an
unfair knock to chaplains. But we’re hardly a “melting pot”
in this country yet, either.
Years ago, I was in love with a wonderful girl I’ll call
“Rosita.” We worked and saved—even picked prunes
together. We had a few acres and a shack picked out. I put
a tractor together from salvage parts, and we went
shopping for used furniture. God knows how much I loved
that little dark-haired girl!
But she was Catholic and I, Protestant. She, Italian and
I, English. After a struggle with parents, preacher and
priest, they finally said they could overlook the difference
in nationality, but religion—NO! Each side insisted it had
to be their church all the way. Nobody would give in, so we
had to say goodbye. Now I see how foolish we were.
Religious freedom? What a joke. Were I to do it again,
I’d tell the whole bunch to go fly a kite. A man has only one
love like this in a lifetime.
BLEW MY CHANCE
! student; Janis Lyn Home of
I Fayetteville, a senior animal
! science major; Eddie Norris
Wilson of Milner, a senior
: majoring in agricultural
i
, economics; James Paul
I Williamson, Jr., of Williamson,
’ grade point average 4.0 in
• College of Agriculture; Marc
! Mitchell, pre-med student.