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The Red and Black • Thursday, March 8, 1990 • S
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~ JOE VERSUS THE
VOLCANO
WARNER BROS. ~
Georgia lawmakers pressed for time;
argument endangers child abuse bills
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — A child protection package
backed by Gov. Joe Frank Harris hit an 11th-
hour snag in the Georgia Legislature
Wednesday as the House and Senate split over
how best to ensure that parental discipline
cannot be labeled child abuse.
'Hie dispute endangered four bills designed
to improve the state’s ability to detect child
abuse and protect young victims from further
injury, but one sponsor — Rep. Mary Margaret
Oliver, D-Decatur — expressed optimism the
dispute could be settled in a conference com
mittee.
However, time was becoming an increasingly
important factor for that and other issues still
unresolved in the 1990 session. After
Wednesday, only one working day remained in
the lawmaking period.
The bills at stake include a measure creating
a statewide clearing house on child abuse to
help investigators document cases of abuse,
ana legislation requiring medical examiners to
report suspicious child deaths to a child fatality
review panel.
In passing the bills Tuesday, the Senate
changed language placed in the measures ear
lier by the House to ensure that parental disci
pline couldn’t be considered child abuse
The Senate’s child abuse definition said a
spanking wouldn’t be considered child abuse
“when it is reasonable in manner and moderate
in degree, with consideration for the age, Bize
and condition of the child.”
The House spent nearly two hourB
Wednesday complaining about the changes,
and wound up adding its original language
back to the bills.
MEG RYAN "JOE VERSUS THE VOLCANO" LLOYD BRIDGES ROBERT STACK
GEORGES DELERUE STEVEN SPIELBERG, KATHLEEN KENNEDY FRANK MARSHALL
JOHN PATRICK SHANLEY TERI SCHWARTZ " JOHN PATRICK SHANLEY
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SOMI MATIHiAi MAV MOT Bl SUITABLE FORCHMDRfN , — , „ . IV." ' *!T ’, Xjr
STARTS FRIDAY, JVIARCH 9th
Family opposes show
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — The executive pro
ducer of a new musical about
Martin Luther King Jr., Peter
Wilson, said Wednesday he is sorry
King’s widow objects to the London
production, "especially since ... she
has not even read the script.”
The King family, in a statement
Tuesday, said the musical, "King,”
“trivializes Dr. King’s legacy.”
Wilson said the production,
which combines film, music and
stage acting to evoke the final
years of King’s life, is “a great
tribute to Dr. King, one of the out
standing figures in American his
tory.”
Wilson revealed that the lyricist
for the musical, writer and actress
Maya Angelou, “wishes to disso
ciate herself from the production.”
But he said it would be a “mistaken
impression” to believe that she
could remove her name or her ly
rics at this point.
Asked further what it is that the
family finds objectionable about
the production, which opens April
11 in London, family publicist Kent
Matlock could not offer specific de
tails Wednesday. He said the
family has ‘limited knowledge” of
the production.
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Tempers flare in rules
committee meeting
The Associated Press
ATLANTA — Tempers flared
in a House committee
Wednesday when a legislator ac
cused a well known lobbyist of
single-handedly blocking an envi
ronmental bill.
The incident occurred during a
meeting of the House Rules Com
mittee, where Sen. Quillian
Baldwin, D-LaGrange, was at
tempting to persuade the panel
to schedule floor debate on a
Senate-passed bill banning the
sale of detergents containing
phosphorous.
The Rules Committee sets the
debate calendar for the House
during the last half of the legis
lative session.
Baldwin told the committee,
‘This bill has been held up by one
lobbyist,” and added, “No lobbyist
should have more power than a
member of the House and
Senate."
He singled out Joe Sports, a
veteran lobbyist who is popular
with legislators and whose cli
ents include Monsanto, which
processes phosphate at an Au
gusta plant.
Baldwin said Sports had been
encouraging members of the
House leadership to keep the bill
off the calendar. Several ranking
members of the Rules Committee
disputed the charge.
“You can’t prove it's been held
up by anybody,” snapped Rep.
Frank Pinkston, D-Macon.
Rep. Bill Lee, D-Forest Park,
the committee chairman, said no
one had discussed the bill with
him.
Despite the flap, the com
mittee gave its narrow approval
for the bill to go to the floor
Sports said after the meeting
that his client opposed the bill be
cause an existing state law gives
the state power to order local gov
ernments to ban the sale of deter
gents with phosphorous and most
counties in the metropolitan At
lanta area already have done so.
Senate approves relief bill
The Associated Press
ATLANTA In legislative ac
tion Wednesday, the Senate gave
final approval to legislation ap
propriating $2.2 million for di
saster relief in counties
devastated last month by torna
does and floods. The bill now goes
to the governor for his signature.
—Also given final approval in
the Senate was legislation re
quiring applicants for state jobs
to pass a drug test.
—The House gave final ap
proval to legislation imposing an
excise tax on the sale of mari
juana or controlled substances.
The measure establishes taxes of
$3.50 per gram on marijuana and
$200 per gram on controlled sub
stances, and allows prosecutors
to charge drug dealers with
failure to pay the tax, in addition
to other illegal drug charges they
face.
—The Senate approved legis
lation that would change the
state’s method of electing supe
rior court judges. The bill is de
signed to be a vehicle for the
Legislature to address a possible
settlement of a federal suit that
contends Georgia’s method of se
lecting judges is discriminatory.
Sen. Gary Parker, D-Co-
lumbus, had offered a series of
substitute bills that would create
new judgeships in 19 judicial cir
cuits.
Parker said he introduced the
measures just to get the Senate
to address the issue.