Let's see how she likes this one. 
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Parents advertise free babysitting from Southlake teen who broke curfew
Associated Press
Posted on August 20, 2010 at 10:25 AM
SOUTHLAKE -- A newspaper advertisement offers free baby-sitting by a Fort Worth-are teenager who violated an 11 p.m. curfew set by her family.
The recent ad on behalf of 16-year-old Kirstin Rausch of Southlake says: "Want a FREE BABYSITTER for a night out?" It provides the girl's name, says she's in trouble for missing her curfew and offers 30 hours of free baby-sitting as her punishment.
Robert Rausch says the ad is meant to teach his daughter a lesson and also help others.
The girl says she probably won't violate curfew again or throw any more late-night parties, which got her in trouble in the first place.
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In this Aug. 10, 2010 photo, Southlake, Texas resident Kirstin Rauch, 16, shows an ad her father placed in The Southlake Journal offering free babysitting as a punishment for missing her curfew. Robert Rausch placed an advertisement offering his daughter's free baby-sitting services in the community newspaper in Southlake, a wealthy suburb of Dallas-Fort Worth that is home to business leaders and professional athletes. (AP Photo/The Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Adrian McCandless)
Associated Press
Posted on August 20, 2010 at 10:25 AM
SOUTHLAKE -- A newspaper advertisement offers free baby-sitting by a Fort Worth-are teenager who violated an 11 p.m. curfew set by her family.
The recent ad on behalf of 16-year-old Kirstin Rausch of Southlake says: "Want a FREE BABYSITTER for a night out?" It provides the girl's name, says she's in trouble for missing her curfew and offers 30 hours of free baby-sitting as her punishment.
Robert Rausch says the ad is meant to teach his daughter a lesson and also help others.
The girl says she probably won't violate curfew again or throw any more late-night parties, which got her in trouble in the first place.

In this Aug. 10, 2010 photo, Southlake, Texas resident Kirstin Rauch, 16, shows an ad her father placed in The Southlake Journal offering free babysitting as a punishment for missing her curfew. Robert Rausch placed an advertisement offering his daughter's free baby-sitting services in the community newspaper in Southlake, a wealthy suburb of Dallas-Fort Worth that is home to business leaders and professional athletes. (AP Photo/The Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Adrian McCandless)
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