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Sunday, Nov. 08, 2009

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Dancer has bump in her career path

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DEAR ANNIE: I am engaged to an exotic dancer, and we recently found out she is pregnant. This is the problem: I was laid off but receive unemployment. My fiancee told me she wants to dance more and in different venues to gain the much-needed money.

I cannot stand her job. But she is a loving woman, and I want to stick by her side. I am stumped about what I should do. — Dancer’s King

DEAR KING: Pregnancy usually creates its own limitations for dancing, particularly the exotic kind. Your fiancee should first check with her obstetrician to make sure what she does will not affect the baby. Then you must discuss with her whether she is willing to stop dancing as her pregnancy progresses and after the baby is born. If money is an issue, she can look for jobs in less-upsetting fields. Otherwise, this will be a continuing source of conflict.

DEAR ANNIE: When my ex-husband died three years ago, we found a copy of his mother’s will, which stated her entire estate would go to him, and if he died before her, to our son. In August, however, we discovered there was another will leaving everything to my son’s aunt, who was executrix. She had power of attorney for years, and now we can’t find any information on what should have gone to my son.

My son and I can’t afford a lawyer. My son’s grandparents loved him very much, and as he is the only grandchild, I know his grandmother would not have done this willingly. Where can we go for help? — Heartbroken

DEAR HEARTBROKEN: A little legwork will allow you to get some information. If you believe there were two competing wills, you can go to the court in the city where your mother-in-law lived and research to see if there was a probate proceeding. That will tell you which will was accepted by the court. At that point, you will need legal assistance to take it further, but you may find a lawyer who will take your case on a contingency basis.

DEAR ANNIE: Thank you for printing the letter from “Concerned Aunt,” whose nephew is an ex-offender looking for work.

The U.S. locks up a larger percent of its population than any other country. Most will be released at some point. Too many employers will not hire them, and landlords will not rent to them. We must find ways of incorporating ex-offenders into society because we cannot afford to continue returning them to prison. Warehousing so many people in prisons squanders our tax dollars and ruins salvageable lives and families.

The respected Pew Research Center for the States says more than one in every 100 people in the U.S. is behind bars. Many of their friends and families are among your readers. I hope you will often answer questions concerning incarceration issues. — Palmdale, Calif.

DEAR PALMDALE: We believe it is incredibly shortsighted to make it so difficult for ex-offenders to get jobs. It only encourages recidivism, which hurts all of us. Every state should provide help so those who have served their time can become productive and self-supporting citizens. And we admire and congratulate those companies willing to hire them.

Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar,are at Annie’s Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190, Chicago, IL 60611.

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