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Newspaper clipping Souix St. Marie Mich, Tues.June 23,1970

(As Selected by NEA)

Dalhman Carroll, as Julia, gets to do her real thing , singing "Just In Time." Gary Crosby guests as the leader of a group playing in town. Julia is asked to renew an old acquaintance with him to get some tickets to his sold out concert. She does, and winds up on the bandstand, in a scene shot at the Hollywood Bowl. (REPEAT)

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"Foreign Exchange," on The Movie of the Week, is the second of two films shot for television, starring Robert Horton as an ex-British Intelligence agent, forced back into service by his ruthless ex-boss (Sebastian Cabot). The agent agrees to go to Moscow where he will be jailed as a spy in order to effect a prisoner exchange. But when he gets there, he finds the deal is as dead as the Russian spy to be swapped, and that his real purpose is to undermine the Russian spy system with an even more complex prisoner exchange deal than the first. Jill St. John is featured. (REPEAT)

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Anne Baxter brightens a n y corner where she is, including Marcus Welby, M.D. tonight. As Dr. Welby's occasional love interest, she and Robert Young become concerned over a young hippie, very pregnant and suffering from mononucleosis. She takes the girl in, and creates an emotional involvement because of her own daughter, who would have been the same age had she lived. She not only wants to care for the girl, but she decides she must keep the baby. (REPEAT)

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ANN LANDERS SAYS...

Dear Ann Landers: It is now abundantly clear to even the most empty-headed fools that something drastic must be done within the next decade to limit the size of families or we are all doomed. Now that the country has been scared out of its wits about the side effects of the pill-with very poor evidence, according to my doctor-there will be many more unwanted pregnancies. True, the abortion laws are being liberalized-in some states (an encouraging sign that we are emerging from the Dark Ages)-but still many women will die because the change in laws didn't come soon enough to their state. 

All this strikes me as grossly unfair. Why must it be the sole responsibility of the female to keep from getting pregnant? After all, the male carries the sperm that fathers the child. A simple operation called a vasectomy can be performed in a doctor's office. It sterilizes the male without affecting his sexual prowess. After a couple has had two children (which seems to be the ideal size for our kooked-up  world) the husband could put an end to his wife's anxiety about getting pregnant by having this simple surgical procedure. What do you say? Are you with me? - M. J. M. 

Dear M.J.M.: My medical consultants tell me a vasectomy is a safe, sane operation and it in no way reduces a man's virility-only his fertility. It has solved a good many marital problems and it could solve many more. Yes, I'm with you. 

Dear Ann Landers: I wonder if you realize what a tremendous weapon you wield in your column. I refer to the letter from the tramp who said she had been having an affair with a city official whose wife was in poor health. I'm sure a great many cit officials were made uncomfortable by that column. 

I happen to be a city official whose wife is in poor health. My wife reads your column every day-and so do I. Frequently she points out letters which she thinks are especially good. Sometimes she says, "Doesn't this remind you of So-And-So?" Today she was noticeably silent. It was one of the few columns she didn't comment on. She seemed a little sad all day. 

The fact that a man's wife is not in the best of health doesn't give him the license to fool around. I've had some interesting offers, but I wouldn't trade my wife for any woman in the world. Even though she is sick a lot, she's the only girl in the world for me. Please print this.- A City Official

Dear Official: On behalf of every city official in the United States (who isn't fooling around) I thank you.

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Dear Ann Landers: I spent the weekend with a friend who went to the big city to work last year. We were high school classmates. I was surprised to find that every one of her towels and dishes has the name of a big hotel on it. I asked how she got away with all that stuff. She laughed and said-"Practice!" When I told her I'd be afraid to try, she said, "Hotels expect it. It's included in the bill." Is this true?  Is what she does O.K.? -MNX

Dear MNX: What your friend means is that hotel rates area higher because of thieves like her. Someone has to absorb the cost of the stealing. Do I think it is O.K.? I do not. A person has no more right to take a towel from a hotel than from a department store. 

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What awaits you on the other side of the marriage veil? How can you be sure your marriage will work? Read Ann Landers' booklet, "Marriage-What To Expect." Send your request to Ann Landers in care of your newspaper enclosing 50 cents in coin and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope.
(c) 1970, Publishers-Hall Syndicate

Two More File For 106th District Representative

ST. IGNACE - Two St. Ignace men, Glenn W. Law Jr., and Donald C. Stark, both Republicans, have recently tossed their hats in the ring with a slate of 10 Republican candidates for nomination for State Representative, 106th District in the Aug. 4 primary election. 

Law was born in Lansing, moving to St. Ignace in 1942. A graduate of LaSalle High School, he served three years in the U.S. Marine Corps. 

Following the active military service, he attended Ferris State College, qualifying for a Bachelor of Science degree is pharmacy. He has been active in the St. Ignace area with lectures and slide presentations on drug abuses. 

Stark is a native of Petoskey, moving to St. Ignace in 1963. 

While a Petoskey resident, Stark served as a city councilman, supervisor, Emmet County Board of Supervisors, and a mayor of Petoskey. 

Since moving to St. Ignace, Stark has been elected to the St. Ignace Board of Education, serving as vice president. 

AMA Sets Up To Study Ne...

By BRIAN SULLIVAN

CHICAGO (AP) Leaders of the American Medical Association, accused of ignoring the medical problems of the needy, are considering the
establishment of a committee to receive complaints from minorities and the poor.

The suggestion was made by Dr Malcom Todd, a former president of the California Medical Society, following a confused and raucous verbal confrontation with consumer groups Sunday at the opening of the AMA's annual meeting in New York.  

At the 1969 gathering, protestors broke into the meeting of the AMA's governing body, the House of Delegates.

This year, anticipating trouble the AMA closed its House of Delegates sessions. Newsmen were permitted to watch proceedings on closed-circuit
television.

To provide protest groups with a forum, the AMA named Dr. Todd to head a committee to hold a special hearing, the first for consumers in AMA history.

The consumer groups demanded instead that they be allowed to speak directly to the House of Delegates. A group of about 20 confronted security guards at the House session, but left quietly after being refused permission to enter.

At the hearing, they elected their own chairman, Jim Wagner of Chicago, chairman of the Comprehensive City Health Planners Association.

Dr. Todd and Wagner then vied for leaderhip of the session, each holding a microphone.