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WASHINGTON—Rep. Jack Flynt, Sixth District of
Georgia, is pictured (rear) as he prepares to introduce
United States Attorney General Griffin Bell (left) to
Members of the Appropriations Subcommittee on State,
Justice, Commerce, and the Judiciary. Attorney General
Bell was on Capitol Hill presenting testimony concerning
1978 appropriations for the Justice Department.
Rep. Flynt opposes
ban on saccharin use
Rep. Jack Flynt has co
sponsored a resolution in
opposition to the Federal Drug
Administration’s proposed ban
on saccharin. The resolution
expresses the sense of the
House that no ban on saccharin
should take effect without prior
Congressional approval.
Flynt stated that “I have co
sponsored H. Res. 400, express
ing the sense of the House that
the proposed ban on saccharin
should not go into effect until
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the Congress has held hearings
and found the normal consump
tion of saccharin is unsafe. I feel
that this resolution is a clear
indication to the FDA that the
agency has exceeded the
regulatory process in proposing
a ban on saccharin.”
Congressman Flynt went on
to say “the proposed saccharin
ban is one more clear example
of the unwarranted and
continual expansion of the
Federal Bureaucracy.”
Wesleyan honors
Mary Stephens
MACON, Ga. — Mary
Stephens of Griffin has earned
semester honors at Wesleyan
College during fall semester.
Miss Stephens, a freshman at
Wesleyan, is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Stephens of
503 East College street.
Shirah enrolls
at Wilmore
Richard Owen Shirah, son of
Mr. and Mrs. E.O. Shirah of
Griffin, is enrolled as a student
at Asbury Theological
Seminary, Wilmore, Ky., in a
course of study leading to the
Master of Divinity degree.
z STDcoa
How to locate
missing relatives
By Abigail Van Buren
© 1977 by Chicago Tribune-N. Y. News Synd. Inc.
DEAR ABBY: A recent article in the Birmingham (Ala.)
News credits you with helping to unite two sisters who
hadn't seen each other for 23 years.
The older girl came to the U.S.A, as a war bride. Six
years later, both parents died and the younger sister, then
13, was placed with a German family. That's when her
American sister lost track of her. Even the German courts
were unable to locate the younger sister to inform her that
she had been left a small inheritance.
Three years ago, the American sister wrote to you
asking for your help in locating her sister in Germany, and
you suggested that she write to the Salvation Army. She
did. It took them three years, but they found her. (She had
married, and her name had been changed.)
Now I would like to locate a brother I haven’t heard from
in 12 years. I don’t even know if he's alive. How do I go
about getting the Salvation Army to help me? How much
do they charge? Thank you.
LOOKING FOR LEO
DEAR LOOKING: The Salvation Army’s Missing
Persons Bureau has branches in every state in the nation
and has located more than 8,500 lost or strayed persons in
the last year.
When no crime has been committed, the police, Red
Cross and welfare agencies refer callers to the Salvation
Army. They have reunited adopted children with their
“real" parents, returned to their families men who got
tired of “freedom” but were too embarrassed to go home.
Brothers and sisters who had been separated in childhood
have also been brought together.
The Salvation Army has no special method. They check
forwarding addresses and military records, telephone old
friends and ex-employers.
Some people do not want to be found because they have
found a better life than the one they abandoned. Ln that
case, the Salvation Army reports that they have located
the missing person but cannot reveal his whereabouts.
Whether a search requires two days or 10 years, the cost
is the same—one dollar. And believe it or not, some folks
don’t pay.
If you want help in locating a lost relative, write to me
and I’ll forward your letter to the Missing Persons
Department of the Salvation Army.
DEAR ABBY: What do you think of a father who takes
showers and baths with his 8-year-old daughter?
He and the girl's mother are divorced, and he has
custody of the girl. (The mother wanted her, but the court
decided in favor of the father.)
The girl is large for her age, has reached the stage of
curiosity about her own body and has very little modesty.
She adores her father and likes to cuddle up with him and
kiss him while watching television.
He has two bedrooms in his apartment, but I know this
child crawls into his bed at night.
Am I concerned for no good reason? And at what age do
children outgrow such behavior? There is no communica
tion between the parents.
JUST WONDERING
DEAR JUST: The child is much too old for the
intimacies you describe. Cuddling is fine, but showering
and bathing together, and sharing one bed are out! If the
mother can prove that the above allegations are indeed
true, she could go to court and possibly gain custody of the
child.
Hate to write letters? Send $1 to Abigail Van Buren, 132
Lasky Dr., Beverly Hills, Calif. 90212, for Abby’s booklet
“How to Write Letters for All Occasions.” Please enclose a
long, self-addressed, stamped (240 envelope.
Junior Women honor
hard working members
Members of the Junior
Woman’s Club heard a talk on
child abuse and honored some
members for outstanding work.
William Feely, executive
director of the Griffin-Spalding
Hospital, discussed child abuse
and physical and mental abuse.
A question and answer period
was part of the program.
Mrs. Nancy Bonner received
a sliver bowl in recognition of
her being named Club Woman
of the Year. The club also
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recognized Mrs. Roy Littleton,
Mrs. Julian Mobley, Mrs. Lee
Sisk, Mrs. Ernest Snyder, Mrs.
Ed Dingier, Mrs. Jim Roberts
and Mrs. Russell Lowery for
outstanding work.
Chairmen receiving
recognition included Mrs.
Earnest Snyder, arts; Mrs. Lee
Sisk, public affairs; Mrs.
Russell Lowery, home life.
The April meeting will be a
tour of the Junior Achievement
section at Dovedown.
Charles Mobley seeking GAE office
Three candidates will vie for
the position of GAE president
elect at the State Convention
March 23-26: Charles F. Mobley
of Griffin-Spalding, Barbara
Muntean of Clayton, and
Franklin Shumake of Tallulah
Falls.
Mobley, principal of
Beaverbrook Elementary
School in Griffin, is completing
a three-year term on the GAE
Covering Board. He has served
on the GAE Credentials and
Elections Committee and the
GAE Unification Committee.
A member of the Teacher
Education Council (TEC), he
has served two terms on the
Elementary School Committee
of the Southern Association for
Accrediting Schools and
Colleges.
A member of the United
Teaching Profession for 18
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Page 7
years, Mobley holds an Ed.D.
from Nova University, an MA
from Peabody College, and a BS
from Georgia Southern. He is a
native of Griffin.
Mobley has taught science at
the junior high and elementary
levels in Griffin and in Brevard
County, Fla. He served as
president of the Brevard County
Classroom Teachers
Association and of the Griffin-
Spalding Association of
Educators.
A reading teacher at Babb
Junior High School in Clayton
County, Barbara Muntean is
state president of the
Association of Classroom
Teachers. She has served as a
local association president, and
as a member of the Professional
Development Commission,
Council of Affiliate Presidents,
and the Governance Task
Griffin Daily News Saturday, March 19,1977
Force.
A lobbyist at the state capitol
for the past six years, Muntean
has served two three-year
terms on the Georgia Teacher
IN MEMORY
In loving memory of our mother, Mrs. Desser
Collier, who passed away March 20, 1974, 3
years ago.
Three years ago today, Jesus called you away.
Although the years continue to slip away, we still
miss you every day.
But our memories are very clear, and we'll
always have that part of you with every passing
year.
Sadly missed by children and grand
children.
Education Council, both as a
delegate and a member of the
executive committee.