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Dear Ann Landers,
t is alarming and frightening that increasingly fewer eligible voters exercise their right to vote or pay attention to the issues or who is running for office. How many times have we heard someone say, "My one vote won't matter, so I just didn't bother"? For several years I was an election judge supervisor at one of the precincts in our city. The following was copied from a page in The Election Judge's Manual. Since your column is nationally syndicated, perhaps it will be read by many people who will finally realize how important one vote can be. If our right to vote in a free election were ever taken away, there would be utter chaos. Please, Ann, get behind this. How Important Is One Vote? In 1645, one vote gave Oliver Cromwell control of England. In 1649, one vote caused Charles I of England to be executed. In 1868, one vote saved President Andrew Johnson from impeach-ment. In 1875, one vote changed France from a monarchy to a republic. In 1876, one vote gave Rutherford B. Hayes the presidency of the U.S. In 1923, one vote gave Adolf Hitler leadership in the Nazi Party. In 1941, one vote saved Selective Service-just weeks before Pearl Harbor was attacked. -From Missouri

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Our Reader to Reader Question of the Week:


Dear Readers,
, not for my sake, but to help your young readers who are having trouble at home and think their lives are lousy. I’ve spent the last four years as a runaway living on the streets of Los Angeles. I was never happy at home. I didn’t like it when someone in my family told me what to do. I fought with everybody. I wish I had listened. Now I realize they were trying to help me because they loved me. Every day in Los Angeles has been a battle for my survival. Before I had spent a month out here, I was into prostitution. I was only 14 years old. I’ve done a lot of drugs, lived under bridges and slept in alleys off Hollywood Boulevard. I’ve eaten out of dumpsters behind restaurants and fallen in with psychos and winos. It’s a miracle that I’m still alive. ANN LANDERS Actually, I shouldn’t say it’s a miracle because my luck ran out. I just saw a doctor and was given a death sentence. I’m now IB years old, I’m seven months pregnant and I have AIDS. I’m writing this letter to tell other kids that no matter how bad things are at home and how tough you think your life is, it’s 100 per-cent better than it would be on the streets. Stay where you are, and work things out. If you feel like you need a break from your family, go visit a friend or take a 10-day backpack trip, but don’t run away. There are already thousands of kids out here who are in the same spot I’m in, and Lord knows how many there are in other cities. Please don’t add to that number. Stay home no matter what. I wish I had.

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"Opportunities are usually disguised as hard work, so most people don't recognize them."
-Ann Landers