) Friday, September 25,1992 The Battalion Page 3 (the story so far...) by thomas deeny iNqiPt kot* *y's ounx‘3f’ac& sau»m, me ‘Uappy higiv cujb*-- uou'rt. saviry MOOT- p«Dpk. t'av't ttiiaxzl all ts use I brtin saj ie purpi ■oblemsl w hocante PurpcJ )lems‘-f tO SOii; The Food Chain M/hat z>0 you THi*JK my CAR 7 CM&OY &OOCHT by fieorfie ;d whei for! ;ay i >e messip d meefe his 50-s‘£ ondaya : on ON lesdays tors tojs rot shot the Uni! ith it rip nade an ers contao »le. Forii of Pero!: We Stan; 0 response in favor said Mai pter polk ephone. 1 by Ita rcent sa et backs: rhrauge: is, such: canvassn c, leade: ig area', hey warl , coorfc earing tl: yet in, b: i if hege! yingwoni of Pero: how^ve ? and airi rid Davi ies ue pt wifr' omes fe- -Traill! , accords IT He. f=-o« My £>£iJ\o4 / aillionP'' comnw' ily lotf-ii tion. foury® iglish ® /alley' 5 ; os to i# nd bouf u Stops J itice.W? 5 of solif >gedvi* Ireyho^ e shipP^ Bffl arlo"' el i-730 I^Zy-k LOOK-1 vJr SHOULp 40 FOU ws -rtexe'z A v7ih.4<}€- 'poo< AUAY. JUsCotJ-tug crtteK 9ve of rue olv... Si / \ 0 \ By Clay Welch Tilton Continued from Page 2 the organization contends Tilton's show has reported: — Anthony has lied to the public about his background to bolster his credibility; — Anthony took LSD and ad vocated use of drugs; — Anthony advocated pornography and had sex with members of the Trinity Founda tion; — the Trinity Foundation is a cult. In the statement and in a multi-page document released to the media, the foundation disputes each claim and called the allegation that Anthony had sex with foundation members "the most sensational charge." That charge was made by a woman who was a member of Trinity's Bible study 15 years ago who, according to a signed affidavit, became sexually in volved with a member of a family that took her into their home as part of the Dallas Pro ject, which finds shelter for the homeless. "When confronted . . . she chose to leave the group .... She has become another hurt ing woman taken advantage of by Tilton and his ever-present 'adviser' J.C. Joyce in their at tempts to keep their multi-mil lion dollar business afloat," Guetzlaff read from the state ment. The "PrimeTime Live" seg ment, broadcast in November, alleged that Tilton used a so phisticated telemarketing and direct-mail scheme to raise mil lions of dollars. Boy seeks divorce from his mother THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ORLANDO, Fla. — Squirming and chewing a gum drop, a 12- year-old boy went to court Thurs day seeking a "divorce" from his parents in a case that could help give children more protection against parental abuse. Gregory Kingsley, brown haired and pale, sat in the back of the courtroom with members of the foster family he hopes to live with permanently. His mother, Rachel Kingsley, cried as she denied allegations that she abused, neglected and abandoned him for most of his life. In the past eight years, Gre gory has lived with her only sev en months. Mrs. Kingsley also denied that her fiance, Steve Hack, had re cently beaten her in the presence of her two younger sons, who live with her in St. Louis. A former sister-in-law, Jeanette Glenn, detailed instances of abuse and neglect, accusing Mrs. Kings ley, 30, of being an alcoholic, a drug abuser and even a prosti tute. Sobbing, Glenn said she hoped the two younger boys also could be taken from her "because noth ing' s going to change .... That's the pattern for her." Gregory said he felt unloved and unwanted most of his life* He smiled occasionally in court, chewed on a gum drop and whis pered to those around him. The trial was shown live on CNN and Court TV. Charmaine Crouse Yoest, poli cy analyst with the conservative Family Research Council in Washington, said, "The ramifica tions are huge .... You're look ing at a fundamental shift at the way we view children." Howard Davidson, director of the American Bar Association Center on Children and the Law, said it was unlikely that many children would be hiring lawyers to sever parental custody in the future. He said the case was mainly significant because it had attracted so much attention, not vice versa. "All of the publicity makes it significant," he said. "To my knowledge, this is the first time in American history that a termina- tion-of-parental-rights hearing has been broadcast on national television." Mrs. Kingsley said she tried hard to provide the boys a stable home, but was forced to put them in foster care because she couldn't afford to keep them on a $200-a-week salary. Under questioning from Gre gory's foster father, attorney George Russ, Mrs. Kingsley de nied she had a history of alco holism. Survey depicts black wives as breadwinners THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON — Working wives bring fi nancial success to America's black families, the government said Thursday. Even so, they and their husbands together earn only 85 cents for each dollar earned by a similar white couple. Working couples were the only kind of black family to see their income rise sharply compared with whites over the past two decades, said Claudette Bennett in a Census Bureau study. Black single-earner couples and families headed by men or women alone failed to bet ter their incomes compared with whites. "Black married couples today are far more likely to have wives in the paid labor force," Bennett said. Two out of three black wives work. When they do, they double the median family in come to more than $40,000. Black family incomes lag behind that of white families even when husband and wife work because of "the kind of job that the per son has," Bennett said. In 1990, black men and women were nearly twice as likely as whites to work in low-paying service jobs. Black families in general had median in comes of $21,548 in 1991, $125 more than the year before. That amounted to only 57 cents for every dollar earned by white families. Young black families earn far less than whites their age — around 49 cents to the dol lar for people in their late 20s and early 30s. Although things seem to improve with age, blacks' incomes never come close to whites. By age 35, their income has leveled off at about 60 cents for every dollar earned by white families, and it stays there through retirement and old age. Why have black families overall fared so poorly if working couples are doing so well? It's because blacks are less likely to live as mar ried couples today, said Isabel Sawhil, senior fellow at the Urban Institute. Fewer than half of blacks families have a husband and wife living together today, down from two-thirds 20 years ago. So the families with high income have less impact on the average. 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