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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 5

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Louisville, Kentucky
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5
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THE COURIER-JOURNAL, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1983 3 JPcir Value Green from golf event helps keep special school in the black Glenn Ruthcrford -if 4 Courier-Journal rm columnist were going to get around $35,000 for sure," Sullivan said yesterday. "But I'll tell you, I'm standing here in shock right now at this figure." Sister Georgeann was equally surprised. "It's all so wonderful," she said. "We just can't believe it. We depend on this fund drive so very greatly now.

Because of inflation, our annual expenses have risen to $200,000, so you can see that this goes a long way to help us meet those needs." Without the golf tournament, the school would face a financial crisis. "We'd absolutely have to get the money somewhere," Sister Georgeann said. "We couldn't do without it." But judging from the smiles and enthusiasm on display at Wildwood Monday, they won't ever have to. 1M3, Tht Courier-Journal for the benefit of the Cerebral Palsy School. Everyone from the golf pro and club officers to the help in the kitchen works free of charge on the day of the tournament.

That means that every cent collected for the school goes to the school. This year local people and businesses donated 72 items for the auction everything from a 14-pound country ham (that went for a cool to a large lawn mower ($1,500) and a large basket of fruit Two sets of tickets to November's basketball game between of and UK were sold for $1,100 and $875. So you get the picture. The people who came to the auction didn't sit on their hands; they spent their money. "I told Sister Georgeann (the school's director) that I thought we Monday, as most of you recall, dawned somewhat gloomily under a steady drizzle.

If the rain hadn't been so long overdue and so undeniably needed, the morning might have been downright depressing. tf other words, it wasn't the type of day golfers look forward to, ibut that didn't keep 260 players frojn teeing up at Wildwood Coun-tryrClub. The reason they did was the ninth annual Uncle Ed Kallay Cerebral Palsy Golf Outing, and here's telling you that the whole thing, which is named for the late television sportscaster, Is a hoot. A serious hoot, but a boot nonetheless. Even for a guy whose golf game has more hacks in it than a Chinese kitchen.

Never has a round of golf been more enjoyable. What began in the rain ended in smiles and sunshine, should have left his clubs at home. Lesser men would have bowed to the pressure of having such an obvious target before them. Shot after shot provided as good an opening line as anything Abbott ever said to Costello. But these men were big enough to let the easy ones go, and for that I'll always be thankful.

The Important thing, though, isn't the golf, despite the fun that all the players seemed to have. And it's not the evening's banquet and auction, either. What's important about this event is its purpose. The Cerebral Palsy School at 1520 Baxter Ave. depends heavily on the annual golf tournament for financial support.

So it's nice to report that this year, just as in the past, the school's friends at Wildwood didn't let them down. This year the event raised $14,000 more than it did the year before, and $26,000 more than it did two years ago. Gene Sullivan, the Wildwood golf pro and the main mover and shaker behind the outing, said that $46,234.81 had been collected as of early yesterday afternoon. "I'm sure we're going to have more coming in," he said, "but as things stand right now I'm stunned." Little wonder. The event itself is one of the most under-publicized and under-recognized charities in the city.

Every year for nearly a decade now, members and workers at Wildwood have given a day of their services free of charge Some drivers won't buy insurance, panel is told End your isolationism, theologian tells Baptists thanks in no small measure to four Wildwood members with the golf manners of professionals and the combined patience of a quartet of Jobs. Chuck Handman, the club's president; Don Wood, the vice president; and members Bernie Smith and Bill Kern had the good humor and kindness to endure the presence of a newspaper guy who sive battle over the inerrancy essentially, literalness of the Bible. "You don't turn your back on your own mother" or "leave home, abandon your family, compromise lifelong loyalties, desert a huge company of friends." Besides, "there's nowhere else to go" because Southern Baptists have not established many contacts with the other parts of Christ's church. Southern Baptists, he said, don't really feel at home in any other company. "I have never heard a really honest, truly transparent he said, "to the question, 'Why isn't the Southern Baptist Convention involved in cooperative For example, it's not a member of the National Council of Churches or the World Council of Churches, and the local association of Southern Baptists is not a member of metropolitan Louisville's in-terfaith agency, the Kentuckiana In-terfaith Community (although two individual congregations are).

The reason usually given, Hill said, is that Southern Baptist polity doesn't permit it; each Southern Baptist church is independent. "Arrogance, imperialist pretensions and provincialism strike me as closer to an accurate explanation than 'because of our polity we can't do Hill said. "Make no mistake: the Southern Baptist Convention is a highly centralized denomination." An honest answer would be that "ethnicity doesn't provide much encouragement toward ecumenicity." A puzzling thing about the denomination's ecumenical failure is that "most Southern Baptists are not exclusivists." Hill said. Another is that many lay people cooperate with members of other denominations every day. And the attitude toward cooperation isn't often belligerent or even negative, but just indifferent, he By SY RAMSEY Associated Press FRANKFORT, Ky.

No law will be able to prevent uninsured motorists from driving on Kentucky highways, an insurance industry representative told legislators yesterday. In fact, said John Gartin of State Farm Insurance some states that don't try to enforce such measures have fewer uninsured drivers than some that crack down on violators. Gartin gave his views to the Subcommittee on Property and Casualty Insurance, which is considering proposals to replace the current sticker bill. Kentucky drivers now must display on their windows a sticker that indicates they have liability insurance and tells when it expires. One measure under consideration, sponsored by Sen.

Jack Trevey, R-Lexington, would do away with the sticker act and substitute insurance cards. Under the proposed arrangement, a vehicle owner could not obtain a license plate without showing the card, which would have to be kept in the vehicle. Upon cancellation, the insurance company would notify state police, and the owner would be required to turn in the vehicle tag. Gartin said not even this method is foolproof because some drivers will continue to use the roads with Semifinalists in competition for Merit scholarships named New director outlines her goals at Southeast Community College Supreme Court justice to get Brandeis medal U.S. Supreme Court Justice Harry A.

Blackmun will receive an award tonight from the Brandeis Society of the University of Louisville law school. Each year the society, which is limited to the top 10 percent of the junior and senior classes, awards the Brandeis medal to a member of the legal profession who best exemplifies the moral and scholastic standards of former Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, a native of Louisville. A society announcement said Blackmun is being honored for his academic achievements and his work to further the individual's rights of privacy. Blackmun, a member of the Supreme Court since 1970, wrote the controversial opinion legalizing most abortions in 1973. He will receive the medal in a closed ceremony at 8 p.m.

in the administration building. McCubbin, Wiggins to have names on ballot Associated Press FRANKFORT, Ky. The secretary of state's office yesterday certified independent candidates Nicholas McCubbin and Don Wiggins to run for governor and lieutenant governor, respectively, in the Nov. 8 general election. Both men had filed petitions earlier in the week to have their names placed on the ballot.

However, the secretary of state's office found that both sets of petitions fell short of the 5,000 required signatures after non-registered voters or other unqualified signatures were eliminated. McCubbin and Wiggins brought in additional signatures yesterday that officials determined brought their totals to more than 5,000. McCubbin, a Manchester attorney, ran unsuccessfully for lieutenant governor in the Republican primary, while Wiggins lost in the Republican gubernatorial primary. McCubbin will run under the Citizens United Party label, while Wiggins filed as a candidate for the Consumers Lobby Party. 2 are appointed to high offices at Murray State Associated Press MURRAY, Ky.

Dr. Thomas B. Hogancamp and Don C. Kelly were named interim vice presidents of Murray State University yesterday, filling the positions left vacant when James O. Hall died Saturday.

University President Kala M. Stroup announced the appointments and outlined several administrative changes in a letter to the campus community. Hogancamp, executive director of the MSU Foundation since 1977, will serve as interim vice president for administrative services. He was vice president for administration and finance from 1968 to 1977. Kelly, director of the Rural Development Institute since 1980, will become interim vice president for university relations and development, a new name for the unit formerly known as university services.

Hall had been vice president for administrative services for more than two years and was also interim vice president for university services. Deckard may attempt to regain IIou.se seat EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) Former 8th District U.S. Rep. Joel Deckard, defeated in his bid for reelection by Democrat Frank Mc-Closkey last November, may run against McCloskey next year.

"It's way too early to say anything definite, but it's a possibility," Deckard said of reports he is preparing to run again. The Evansville Courier reported yesterday that political associates of the Vanderburgh County Republican say he has been talking with party leaders in southwest Indiana to determine interest in his challenging McCloskey next year. By JOHN C. LONG Courier-Journal Stiff Wrlttr A noted authority on religion in the South returned to Louisville and his alma mater Southern Baptist Theological Seminary this week to deliver some provocative answers to an intriguing question: What the Sam Hill is the matter with Southern Baptists? The man with the prickly answers was none other than Sam Hill himself Dr. Samuel S.

Hill, professor of religion at the University of Florida and former preacher's kid at Louisville's Deer Park Baptist Church, where his late father, of the same name, was pastor from 1934 to 1942. Hill went from preacher's kid to president's kid that year, when his father became president of Georgetown College. Hill, 55, returned to the seminary, where he received a bachelor of divinity degree 30 years ago, to deliver the Julius B. Gay Lectures, a series that began in 1895. Although he's no longer a Southern Baptist he became an Episcopalian a few years ago Hill used and "our" in addressing his Alumni Chapel audience about Southern Baptist life.

"I can do so with integrity," he said, "because I am one with you." Yesterday, in the second of his two lectures "The Southern Baptist Convention as an Ethnic Denomination" Hill called upon the denomination to shed its traditional standoffish ness and work more closely with other denominations. Southern Baptists have got "too much to share and too much to learn" not to do so, he said. Southern Baptists are standoffish because they're a cultural phenomenon unto themselves an ethnic denomination, a tribe, a family Hill said. That's why, he predicted, it will never split up, despite its divi 28 are named to task force on state's schools Associated Prist FRANKFORT, Ky. James Rat-cliffe, chairman of a task force formed by the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce to advocate improvements in Kentucky education, announced the group's membership yesterday.

Ratcliffe, a Louisville accountant, said the 28 other members include business people, teachers, legislators, school administrators and representatives of statewide associations. "We're extremely pleased that we have sjch a broad representation on the taak force," said Ratcliffe, who is also vice chairman of the state Board of Education. He said the Kentuckians for Excellence in Education Task Force hopes to make recommendations to the 1984 General Assembly and will be "more than jult another study group." Leonard Marshall, state secretary of public protection and regulation, and Phillip Thompson, president of the state chamber of commerce, announced formation of the group last month at a legislative subcommittee session. They will be members of the task force. The task force will be privately funded and will hold an organizational meeting tomorrow in Frankfort.

Among the members of the task force will be Lexington attorney Ed Pilchard, who heads a citizens' group that will also be studying ways to improve the state's educational system. Other task force members are: A. O. Albright of Lexington, former president of Northern Kentucky University; Raymond Barber, state superintendent of public instruction; Lois Barnes of Versailles, teacher; John Berry New Castle attorney and former state senator; Malcolm Chancey, executive vice president of Liberty National Bank in Louisville; state Rep. Joe Clarke, O-Danvllle; Mary Cohron of Bowling Green, member of a local school board; Joyce Owen Griffin of Hawesville, a teacher; Joy Griffiths, president of an Ashland auto dealership; and Edith Hayes, assistant superintendent of Fayette County schools.

Also, E. W. Kesler of Louisville, formerly with the Kentucky Farm Bureau; Warren Lee of Louisville, administrative manager for the Carpenters Pension Trust Fund; state Sen. Michael Moloney, D-Lexington; Sen. Clyde Middleton, R-Covington; Dr.

Clay Parks of Dry Ridge; Meade County School Superintendent Stewart Pepper of Brandenburg; House Speaker Bobby Richardson, D-Glasgow; Robert Ruberg of Covington, chairman of the state Board of Education, and Mary Ryan of Murray, a teacher. Also, Rep. Art Schmidt, R-Cold Spring; Lynwood Schrader, executive vice president of Kentucky Utilities; Donald Snyder of Richmond, executive vice president of Begley Drugs; Frank Welch of Pikevllle, a high school principal; John Williams of Paducah, chairman of Computer Services; and state Sen. Joe Wright, O-Harned. out tags, insurance or even driver's licenses.

"We look at the uninsured-motorist problem differently," Gartin said. It's based on considerable research." He said the research shows that "no matter what you do, you're not going to get the uninsured motorist off the highway." Gartin said the issue comes down to how much money a state is willing to spend to "go from 80 percent to 85 percent of motorists who are insured." Rep. Pete Worthington, D-Ewing, said he is drafting a bill that would call for use of the state's vehicle computer system to check on whether insurance is being carried by owners. Patrick Watts, counsel for the state Insurance Department, said that prohibiting uninsured motorists from using the roads is a legitimate exercise of state power. Watts said his agency has not looked into whether auto-insurance-rates might be lower if insurance cards were required.

He said the department believes that as many as one-third of all motorists in Kentucky may be uninsured, but does not really know, except that "a significant number are in violation of the law." Rep. Lewis Foster, D-Lewlsburg, predicted that some type of new bill aimed at the problem will be considered in the 1984 legislative session. Frankfort Frederick A. Asbury and Duane T. Griffin, both of Franklin County High School.

William R. Draper of Western Hills High School. Franklin Tracey M. Roberts of Franklin Simpson High School. Georgetown Stephanie A.

Johnson of Scott County High School. Glendalt Tracy M. Hodge of East Hardin High School. Harned Emily S. Elder of Breckenridge County High School.

Har. rodsburg Paul G. Wilson of Harrodsburg High School. Hartford Jenny L. Manasco of Ohio County High School.

Hepfclnsvilkt Michael R. James and John H. Morris, both of University Heights Academy. Jackson Samuel M. Watkins of Jackson High School.

Leitchfield Richard J. McGrew of Grayson County High School. London Jason A. Harper of Laurel County High School. Madisonvllle Richard M.

Pokorny and Vickie D. Veazey, both of Madisonvilie North Hopkins High School. Marlon Nancy Mills of Crittenden County High School. Mayfield Scott A. Hoover of Mayfield High School.

Maysville Paul E. Hiilenmeyer of St. Patrick High School. Middles-bore John A. Werner of Middlesboro High School.

Morehead Stephen S. Taylor of Rowan County High School. Mount Sterling Mary B. Oldham of Montgomery County High School. Mount Washington Michael A.

Scott of Bullitt East High School. Munfordville Clark Craddock of Hart County High School. Murray Charles H. Cella of Murray High School. Nortenvllle Lori K.

Beshears of South Hopkins High School. Owensboro Jeff A. Hulsey of Apollo High School. Tim D. Haney of Daviess County High School.

Christopher M. Graney and Joseph M. Sparks, both of Owensboro Catholic High School. Kenny L. Lambrlch of Owensboro Christian Academy.

Thomas L. Stratton of Owensboro High School. Paducah Peter A. Besold and Rebecca A. Kitchen, both of Lone Oak High School.

Ann E. Robertson and Daniel A. Stryker, both of Paducah Tilghman High School. Jonna K. McElrath, Michael W.

Morse and Dana L. Wallace, all of Reidland High School. Plkeville Yancey D. Ward of Johns Creek High School. Joseph S.

Anderson and Nelson Kelly both of Pikeville High School. Pleasure Ridge Park Joan V. Conard, Carla J. Harris, Mike A. Hornbeck, Jamie K.

Roberts, Timothy Vance and Dominic A. Zoeller, all of Pleasure Ridge High School. Richmond Robert S. Stollger of Madison Central High School. David Bratcher, Mark D.

Gibbard and Adrian R. Long, all of Model Laboratory School. Russell John M. Hatcliff and Sonia L. Olson, both of Russell High School.

Russellville Timothy G. Wright of Russellville High School. Shelbyville Andrew G. Howell of Shelby County High School. Shepherdsville Karen M.

Jones of Bullitt Central High School. Alfred J. Herrmann of North Bullitt High School. Somerset Mary B. Mattingly of Pulaski County High School.

Dania M. Egedl of Somerset High School. Stearns Robert E. Gatton of McCreary Central High School. Vanceburg Kathleen E.

File of Lewis County High School. Versailles David R. Bow-den and Tony P. Mize, both of Woodford County High School. West Paducah Charles T.

Ezzell and Stephen P. Vaughn, both of Heath High School. Whitesburg William R. Boggs of Whites-burg High School. Winchester Karen E.

Berry-man of George R. Clark High School. Southern Indiana Bedford Wallace D. Johnson of Bedford North Lawrence High School. Bloomington Khushvant S.

Bhola, Rex Burton, J. Terry Clapacs, Paul E. Dodd, Marion C. Eakin, Clay Gough, Erin E. Hillenbrand, Joe C.

Ruff, David L. Seim, Allan M. Streib, Raja S. Thiagarajan, Todd J. Tomczyk, Mahalia L.

Way and Seth A. White, all of Bloomington High School North. Don A. Adams, Henry C. Bayerle, Joseph A.

Frommer, Jane E. Guskin, Beth A. Stein and David A. Terret, all of Bloomington High School South. Brownstown Christy A.

Porter of Brownstown Central High School. Clarksville Renee L. Cook of Our Lady of Providence High School. Columbus Faith V. Nielander and Emma Sweetland, both of Columbus North High School.

Edinburg Angela C. Nay of Edinburg High School. French Lick Douglas R. Emmons of Springs Valley High School. Jasper Paul J.

Pflster of Jasper High School. Hew Albany June K. Hsiao, Will C. Randall and Anderson R. White, all of Floyd Central High School.

Michael R. Becht, Carol A. Horwitz and David W. Reynolds, all of New Albany High School. Ramsey Jason p.

Cooper, Dawn S. Norris and Kelly J. Uhl, all of North Harrison High School. Scottsburg Louis D. Ater of Scottsburg High School.

Seymour Matthew M. Crouch, James B. Hazard and Teresa A. Niemeyer, all of Seymour High School. Tell City Candice Becker and Paul T.

Weber, both of Tell City High School. Vevay Kenneth W. Roberts of Switzerland City High School. Vincannes Joseph Karkoski and Jana M. Peterson, both of Lincoln High School.

10 die in runway collision PEKING (AP) Ten people were killed yesterday when a domestic airliner carrying 100 passengers collided with a military plane just before taking off from the tourist city of Guilln, the official news agency reported. Staff Photo by Cort Best Dr. Samuel S. Hill Calls Baptists an ethnic group said. Southern Baptists are "more pro-Southern Baptist than they are anti the rest of the people of God." Southern Baptists just aren't very curious about Catholics, Lutherans and Pentecostals, he said.

But "your comfort, your smugness, your inertia won't do," he said. Southern Baptists "the principal portrayers of the Christian faith in an entire region" "don't measure up to the role history has thrust upon" them. "There is only one body of Christ, only one people of God," Hill said, and Southern Baptists must "be very sensitive about their withdrawal from it. We need and are needed. We have so much to learn, so much to give." He commended the seminary for doing something about it through its membership in a consortium of theological schools in the region: As-bury, with Methodist roots, in Wil-more, Lexington Theological Seminary, Disciples of Christ; Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary and Roman Catholic St.

Mein-rad, in Southern Indiana. "We started with an exercise class up there," she said. Interest grew, and this fall 129 people in the area are taking classes, she said. None are physical education courses. On-campus enrollment at Southeast Community College also is on the rise, having increased to about 800 students from 600 last fall.

Part of the reason is that more students are taking their first two years of college at community schools, she said. With the Increase in enrollment, there are plans to add new courses, including two foreign language courses, an English course and a philosophy course, next fall. Beginning in 1985, the college will offer a dental-hygiene training course, which will involve construction of a 12-chair dental office, laboratory and darkroom. The school also seeks approval from the University of Kentucky, which oversees the community college program, for a two-year associate degree program in its business-management division. Plans for that program include adding data-processing courses and installing a computer laboratory.

to a questionnaire he sent to the nation's major shipbuilders show that American yards have the capacity and desire to build passenger ships at reasonable prices. The letter from Jeffboafs Hoff-meister, which was addressed to Fields, said the firm has not built a ship as large the Cunard liners but has an interest in taking on such a project and the ability to do so. Hoffmeister said a ship that size would take 45 months to complete and have a delivery price of about $90 million. The Newport Clipper, an $8.5 million ship, was built for Clipper Cruise Lines of St. Louis, which has ordered a second vessel, Jeffboat announced this week.

It was also reported recently that the U.S. Maritime Administration has agreed to guarantee $21.4 million in construction loans for Jeff-boat-built cruise ships. Associated Press CUMBERLAND, Ky. Southeast Community College is "a vehicle for access" to higher education in a rural area, its new director says. Vivian Blevins, the school's first woman director, said her major goal is to remain open to the region's educational needs.

In contrast with larger state universities, "we must understand and appreciate the kinds of problems at small rural colleges," she said. Ms. Blevins, a native of Cumberland, has a doctorate degree in American literature and English education from Ohio State University. Off-campus programs are important at Southeast, she said. "People cannot divorce their husbands, rob a bank and move to the city to get the education they need.

"If we do not go to Jenkins, those people do not go to school." Ms. Blevins said it can take time for people to become accustomed to the idea of off-campus college classes in their community. "It is a matter of exposure," she said, recalling that one man at Ev-arts said several years ago that people in the area did not want college classes offered there. The National Merit Scholarship Corp. has announced the names of the Kentucky and Southern Indiana semifinalists competing for about 5,300 Merit Scholarships to be awarded next spring.

The area high school seniors are among about 15,000 semifinalists trying for the scholarships. The semifinalists in Kentucky are: Lexington area Angela L. Swetnam, Bryan Station High School. Sarah E. Ades, Kent W.

Brabant, Greg E. Cooper, James W. Copeland, Mary M. Graham, Stacey A. Hoffman, Michael A.

Howard, Stephen M. Jameson, Elizabeth M. Kurtz, Kevin T. McConnell, Erik G. Miller, Logan B.

Orndorff, Kelly N. Owens and Thomas A. Slaughter, all of Henry Clay High School. Linda Bridwell, Darin W. Dalton, Timothy H.

Edwards, Elizabeth S. Hughes, Jennifer Lang, Michael L. Maxson, Amy D. Milman, Kenneth W. Pitt and Paige G.

Wilhite, all of Lafayette High School. Joan M. Johnson, Scott M. Johnston, Sharon R. Just and David G.

Ross, all of Lexington Catholic High School. Richard V. Chin, Beth R. Deacon, Samuel W. Gardiner, Thomas Hahn, Robert L.

Nielsen and Sandra L. Senft, all of Tales Creek High School. Louisville Linda G. Campbell and Jackie M. Zwigard, both of Angela Merlci High School.

Percy T. Fenn, Amy Kapel, Jeremy S. Kaplan, David S. Rag-land, William M. Steedly and Louis M.

Weeks, all of Atherton High School. Beatrice M. Acland, Elizabeth L. Beaver, Jonathan F. Hedin, Klmberly S.

Isley, Sarah B. Kinsman, Margaret C. Liu, Stacey E. Scherer, Scott H. Steinberg and Kathleen E.

Wherthey, all of Ballard High School. Nicole S. Moore and Michael Natkin, both of Brown School. Lorl J. Barnes, James H.

Beckemeyer, John Bojanowski, Robert M. Fox, Bryan R. Payne, Timothy M. Uligian, Scott A. Vowels and Andrew W.

Weeks, all of Central High School. John P. Crockett of Bishop David High School. Marian G. Cole, Shana A.

McMahan, Eric A. Ostling, Sho-shanna A. Segal and Thomas P. Walsh, all of DuPont Manual High School. Thomas M.

Beck, Keith T. Lanktord and Nancy E. McElwain, all of Kentucky Country Day School. Kate J. Hardy of Louisville Collegiate School.

Kyle V. Thomas and Karen A. Weyler, both of Male High School; Rhonda K. Beck and Michelle M. Markert, both of Presentation Academy.

Ml-chele A. Davis, Leah M. Haunz, Diane M. Heler-inger, Theresa M. Kargl, Catherine A.

Nonnen-kamp, Clara M. Passafiume and Mary J. Pringle, all of Sacred Heart Academy. Robert W. Adams, Douglas K.

Hudson and Susan M. Ryan, all of Seneca High School. Glenn P. Hodges and Joseph M. Kahn, both of St.

Francis High School. Lawrence V. Antoine, Stephen C. Burke, James B. Carrico, Stephen E.

Craycroft, James D. Gates, Jere K. Green, Been-nan P. Greene, Michael J. Hagerty, Eric A.

Hanke, John P. Hans, David L. Hulsman, Thomas J. Meiman, Daniel C. Olliges, Breaux B.

Rogers and Matt A. Williams, ail of St. Xavier High School. Michael E. Bishop, Robert L.

Bruns, Patrick D. Dolwick, Adam Hammer, Henry M. Kelly, Tom M. Steinmetz, Jerome D. Turner and Thomas B.

Walker, all of Trinity High School. Mary K. Hall, Burt L. Monroe, Sandra L. Payne, John R.

Prather and Frank M. Shipman, all of Waggener High School. Elsewhere in Kentucky Alexandria Matthew B. Adams of Campbell County High School. Ashland Dean R.

Adams and Jennifer L. Alvey, both of Paul G. Blazer High School. Bowling Green Wenson Hsieh, Dov Moore and Troy W. Toman, all of Bowling Green High School.

Kelly A. Gleason, John F. Muth and Scot D. Stewart, all of Warren Central High School. Brandenburg Lisa C.

Ringel of Meade County High School. Buck horn Jeanne Baker of Buckhorn High School. Buckner Mark E. Patton and Michael L. Roberts, both of Oldham County High School.

Corbln Stanley S. Bundy and Clark P. Wells, both of Corbln High School. Elizabeth J. Shaffer and Paul Stewart, both of St.

Camillus Academy. Covington Christopher J. Lung of Covington Catholic High School. Mark H. Kinney and John C.

Roedel, both of Covington Latin School. Daniel W. Hassert of Holy Cross High School. Theresa L. Diet! and Jennifer L.

Fry, both of Notre Dame Academy. John C. Llchtenstein and Robert W. Slater, both of Scott High School. Cynthiana Mark H.

Vest of Harrison County High School. Danville Philippe A. Clholas and Tab L. Farthing, both of Boyle County High School. Bernard F.

Deville, Jeff S. Gregory, Don G. Hanson, Jane M. Vahlkamp and Margaret M. Young, ail of Danville High School.

Ellzabethtown Diana Lynn Armstrong, Wanda J. Daugherty, Russell D. Dougherty and Melissa C. Shore, all of Elizabeth-town High School. Erlanger Oarla K.

Nelms of Lloyd High School. Falmouth Gina A. Boling of Pendleton High School. Florence Tammi L. Arnett and Roberta L.

Hall, both of Boone County High School. Fart Knox Susan L. Gloskowskl of Fort Knox High School. Cert Thomas David J. Berger, John B.

Drees, Keith W. Slater and Jeffrey L. Winters, all of Highlands High School. Shipbuilders suffer defeat in battle over foreign boats Continued from Page 1 Chairman Mario Biaggi, said yesterday in arguing for the bill. The only American-operated, large luxury cruise ships in coastal trade now are the Constitution and the Independence, which serve the Hawaiian Islands.

Biaggi brought laughs when he said, "It sounds ridiculous but this bill would immediately double our fleet." U.S. Rep. E. Clay Shaw, sponsor of the legislation, said it has been 25 years since a large luxury liner was built in this country, and he ridiculed as fantasy the claims by domestic shipbuilders that they might now start on such projects again. "Since the bill's introduction, an armada of ghost ships has appeared on the horizon in a flurry of activity," he said.

But U.S. Rep. Jack Fields, R-Tex-as, an opponent, said that responses.

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