Page 20
March 2003
The AC Phoenix
Bishop W. Davis, Jr.
(lemplg ApostDltc
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A Place to Belong
“People Helping People
- United in God’s Love”
C ■ Stands for Children
0 ■ Stands for Older People
M - Stands for Middle Age People
E - Stands for Everyone
Come with your hopes and dreams,
your cares and tears, and your prayers.
As you worship with us may you realize
your tondest hopes and dreams.
May your cares he removed,
and your tears dried.
May your prayers he answered.
May the love of God abide within you.
You are always welcome to worship
with us at CRT.
The end of yur search for a '
friendly church!
1500 N. Dunleith Avenue
Winston-Salem, NC 27105
722-9841
A Midlife Sex
Crisis For Guys
Sorry guys.
Love and sex may be the key to
a happy marriage to middle-age
men — but their wives don’t
agree.
Readers Digest found that men
ages 57 to 64 become more
attentive to their wives, while
women — finally freed from
family responsibilities — are
interested in other things.
“The guys are saying, ‘Now I
get it. I want more intimacy,”’said
John Gottman, a marriage expert
who analyzed poll results for the
magazine’s February issue.
“And the women are saying,
‘Sorry, bub, I’ve got my own goals
now.”’
A 60 year old New York woman
in the survey said she was finally
getting the chance to travel, but
her retired husband didn’t want
to.
“What am I supposed to do?
Stay home?” she asked. “Life’s
too short.”
The nationwide telephone
survey asked 500 couples how
important good sex was to a
happy marriage. Women ages 57
to 64 rated it at 46 on a scale of
100. Men rated it 62. Women
ages 44 to 56 gave it a 66, while
men ranked it 54.
The differences smooth out
somewhat in later years. The
importance of sex drops for men,
while they remain highly interested
in being in love.
ROOMS BY
RODNEY
WEDOROOH/IS
RIGHT!
923-0019
Kevin Eagan
GREENSBORO COLIEGE JUNIOR
PARTICIPATES IN NEW YORK TIMES COllOQUIUM
Greensboro, N.C. - Greensboro College student
newspaper editor Kevin Eagan participated in a
national colloquium at the Manhattan headquarters
of The New York Times, where representatives from
the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and members of
The Times, editorial board cautioned that campus
newspapers should watch for unsolicited advertising
from extremist groups.
During the cosponsored colloquium on Feb. 10,
Eagan and other editors from colleges and universities around the
nation discussed ways that campus newspapers can balance freedom of
speech while maintaining an appropriate responsibility and account
ability for their readers.
Extremist groups solicit college newspapers, advertising space for
their material because of the cheaper ad rates student papers charge,
said Jeffrey Ross, director of department of campus and higher
education affairs at the ADL.
Some of the more common topics found in the extremist ads include
Holocaust denial, white supremacy and opposition to reparations for
descendants of slaves. According to Ross, when campus media run
extremist ads, controversy erupts on those campuses, attracting local
media attention and giving the extremist group thousands of dollars of
free exposure.
Representatives from The Times told college editors that they have
the right to deny printing anything they deem potentially offensive, and
The Times encouraged student newspapers to scrutinize advertisements
closely before printing them.
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