The4Michigan Daly-Thursday June0,1982-Page 5 Dubliners' pride Joyce's centenary celebration in bloom By the Associated Press DUBLIN, Ireland - James Joyce sits behind glass these days in the lobby of the Greville Arms Hotel in nearby Mullingar, cross-legged, sneaker-shod, squinting through a magnifying glass at a newspaper. Soon after the real-as-life wax figure was unveiled two months ago, an outraged dowager upbraided the young desk staff for commemorating such a "corrupt and pornographic" writer "He should not be considered an Irishman," she declaimed. IT SEEMS THE Irish, who seldom forget their saints and scholars, also sometimes never forgive their sinners. But this month all is forgiven, and the late James Joyce is far from forgotten, as the Irish celebrate the centenary of their most scrutinized and idolized, most sanctified and vilified of authors, the artist who scandalized Dubliners while immortalizing their city-and who with his other hand helped shift the stream of English literature. A SATISFYING chunk survives of the "gallant venal city" Joyce loved and hated. City fathers look for gaggles of literary tourists to conjure the at- mosphere and ghosts of Joyce's stories from its fog-wet alleyways and warm pubs, its boulevards, parks and chur- ches. Dubliners have been notably slow to enshrine their wayward literary son among the heroic failures, venerable martyrs and sentimental versifiers who pack the Irish pantheon. Only last February, Ned Brennan complained to his fellow Dublin city councillors that people were "going overboard" for the 100th anniversary of Joyce's birth. "I DON'T KNOW who we are catering for here," he said. "The average man in the street probably would not even know who Joyce is." To Brennan's relief, a major expense of the Year of Joyce, an $8,000 bust to be unveiled in St. Stephen's Green, is being picked up by the American Ex- press Co. "Joyce would have thought the spon- sorship highly appropriate. He lived most of his life on credit," quipped David Norris, a Trinity College English lec- turer who heads the Joyce Foundation and organized the centenary activities. IT WAS ALSO fitting that the spon- sorship came from across the sea- without American literary and finan- cial patrons in his lean years, the prickly expatriate Irishman might never have won his place as one of the titans of modern letters. Centenary events fill the calendar: A Joyce postage stamp wil be issued; a bridge over the Liffey will be named the See CENTENARY, Page 10 Kelly's behavior (ContinuedfromPage 1) thoughts that are too threatening. He said he did not think Kelly was suffering from true amnesia. Nol called the period that Kelly cannot remember "an acute psychotic episode." When asked by Waterman if Kelly had the "sub- stantial capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of his actions" during the shootings, Nol replied, "No way." "DURING THE psychotic episode, we don't even recognize ourselves. We're a different person, a dif- - ferent body we don't recognize," Nol said. Kelly had disorders in his formal judgement, or ' perception of reality, Nol said. He felt to me to have a paranoid base (to his for- mal judgment), a base of suspicion, a base of anger, a sense of exaggerated justice," he said. "In our political and economic system he saw mostly in- justice, and he was preoccupied with inequity." KELLY'S operational judgment, or ability'to han- die real-life situations, was at the level of a nine- or ten-year-old at the time of the shootings," Nol also said. Nol, however, told Washtenaw County Prosecuting m Attorney Lynwood Noah that Kelly appeared "in 'psychotic, insane' good mental health" during his examinations, which were made last September and this April. Nol told Noah that he thought any act of murder was insane, but later added that although an act may be insane, "the actor need not be." Kelly "was not a true sociopath," Nol said adding he had the potential to feel remorse, guilt, and that he did have a conscience. DURING HIS testimony, Nol criticized the report on Kelly-not yet revealed in court-done by the State Center for Forensic Psychiatry in Ypsilanti. The court ordered Kelly to undergo tests at the forensic center on his competency to stand trial and his criminal responsibility. "This report, in my opinion, is not a psychiatric report, it is a police report," said Nol, who read the report before conducting his own examination. He psychiatrist says said the report was "written with a preconceived notion." Robert Brown, a friend of Kelly's and fellow Omega Psi Phi fraternity member, also testified yesterday on Kelly's behavior prior to the shootings. Brown, a student at both the University of Michigan and Eastern Michigan University, said Kelly "appeared the same as usual to me" at a party two days before the slayings. Brown also said that he noticed a change in Kelly after the defendant returned from Texas, where Kelly went to seek work after being dismissed from the University for academic reasons. "He didn't talk ... or participate as much," Brown said. "He kept more to himself than he had in the past." The trial will resume tomorrow at 2 p.m. Read and Use Daily Classifieds Ann Arbor police officers arrested last night two juveniles after a brief foot chase in the 900 block of Church Street. The 16-year-old male and 15- year-old female were apprehended af- ter jumping from a truck that had been stolen from the Milan area. 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