t C raft awarded I $325,000 mfraud retrial JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) - Former TV an- h rwOman Christine Craft was awar- ded $325,000 in damages by a federal Jury yesterday in the retrial of her suit f laiming the management of a Kansas City television station made fraudulent promises when she was hired. The seven-woman, five-man jury awarded Craft $225,000 in actual damages after about three hours of deliberation. The jury then went back into session, emerging less than an hour later to award Craft $100,000 in punitive damages. Craft, 39, claimed she accepted the co-anchor job at KMBC-TV after the station's managers told her they were interested in her journalism skills. Af- ter she was hired, the management spent much of their energy criticizing her appearance, she alleged. DONALD CRIFFIN, representing the defendant, Metromedia Inc., former owner of KMBC-TV, said later he ex- pects Metromedia to appeal. ; Craft, had sought $500,000 in actual damages and $3 million in punitive . damages as she battled Metromedia in the courtroom a second time. A jury in Kansas City last summer awarded her $$00,000 on the fraud complaint - $75,000 in actual damages and $125,b00 in punitive damages - but that was thrown out by U.S. District Judge Joseph Stevens who said it was "ex- cessive" and ordered a new trial. 'Craft testified at the second trial, which started Jan. 4, that she accepted the job as a co-anchor at KMBC after ;former News Director Ridge Shannon and General Manager R. Kent Replogle told her she was being hired for her journalism skills.. She said Shannon told her she was later removed from the anchor desk because she was "too old and too unat- tractive," and because viewers did not like her. "It's no fun to be known as the world's uglist anchorwoman, believe me," she said outside the courtroom af- ter yesterday's verdicts. "But I have, I hope, some sense of continuing integrity. The more they do this the strongerI get, thank-God." The Michigan Daily - Saturday, January 14, 1984 - Page 3 Alcohol found in drowned Beach Boy's blood I LOS ANGELES - Beach Boys drum- mer Dennis Wilson had a blood-alcohol level of 0.26 percent, more than two- and-a-half times California's limit for drivers, when he drowned Dec. 28 in Marina del Rey, toxicological tests showed yesterday. Los Angeles County coroner's spokesman Bill Gold, who released the' results, refused to say whether the alcohol contributed to Wilson's death, which the office previously classified as an accidental drowning. But a physician who briefly worked with the 39-year-old musician in an alcohol treatment program said the connection was inescapable. "It's not at all unfair to say the alcohol contributed to the accident," said Dr. Joe Takamine of the chemical dependency unit at St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica. Wilson quit the program after two days and drowned three days later. California law classified a person as a drunken driver if their blood alcohol level meaures 0.10. However, Gold said the coroner's office couldn't suggest how Wilson's 0.26 percent level affected his swimming abilities because "there are too many variables in how a person tolerates and reacts to alcohol." The tests did not reveal any other in- toxicants in Wilson's system. Wilson died while diving for scrap in 13 feet of 58-degree water off a friend's boat in a slip at Marina del Ray, an af- fluent yachting community 15 miles southwest of downtown Los Angeles. Friends said he'd had several drinks that day but had a penchant for diving for discards and jumped in wearing only a face mask and cut-off pants. Takamine said Wilson's blond-alcohol level was 0.28 percent when he entered St. John's program and noted he'd been in other treatment facilities. The alcohol may have increased his sense of "bravado" and made him feel immune to water most people would consider too cold for swimming, he said. "I want kids to look at this and when they're down at the beach drinking beer or whatever, to remember,' the doctor added. Mailbox munch AP Photo Letter carrier John Jones from Loveland, Colo., found a serene spot for lunch this week. Jones said the U.S. Mail storage box at Eighth Street and Roosevelt Avenue is at the half-way point on his delivery route and makes an ideal stopping point for his 30-minute break. U.S. arms S. Af M&ASHINGTON (UPI) - The United States has been quietly sidestepping the ban on arms sales to South Africa, the American Friends Service Committee charged yesterday. In response, State Department officials conceded some- military hardware has slipped through license barriers, but denied the bulk of the sales were actually military in nature. THE STUDY by the pacifist Quaker group said that bet- ween 1981 and 1983 U.S. companies sold $28.3 million in goods listed on the State Department's "munitions list" to the apar- theid nation - more than the commercial military exports to South Africa for the previous 30 years. In addition, according to the study, the United States sold $762,000 worth of "non-military" arms and arfimunition to South Africa for hunting and other purposes. "Based on information released to us under the Freedom of Information Act, interview with government representatives and a survey of military industry publications and South African patent documents, he believes the arms embargo is being seriously eroded," the AFSC report said. rica, group says THE REPORT said in some cases the sales were made directly to South Africa and in other cases through third- party countries. In many instances, they were made to private South African industry. The U.N. General Assembly repeatedly has passed resolutions barring all members from selling arms to the white-ruled country. But it is not unusual for Western European countries to quietly ship armaments to that country. AFSC, WHICH was formed= to express the Quaker philosophy as it relates to current events. said U.S. firms sold South Africa electronic devices with military applications, coding equipment, image intensifiers and navigation gear. But a State Department official said, "We do not license the sale of any military equipment to South Africa. We look very, very carefully at every sale and make sure that it is not military equipment. We bend over backward to make sure." The official said that some of the equipment, although listed on the State Department's "munitions 'list," is not military in nature. He said the encryptation devices, for instance, were bought by American firms operating in South Africa so they could en- code their financial statements and transmit them to their home office without any eavesdropping layor asks churches to bal out WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) - Mayor Stephen Lucasi wants churches to help balance the city budget, but religious leaders say it could be the first step toward taxing houses of worship and claim they already help the com- munity "in a more meaningful way than dollars and cents." "Historically we believe strongly in the separation of church and state,'and really ifs that kind of an issue," said the Rev. David Skinner of Calvary Baptist Church on Thursday. "I see our contribution in terms of creating a moral and spiritual climate. LUCASI announced the voluntary donationplan Dec. 13 to a council of churches. He noted that churches, hospitals and other tax-exempt organizations comprise 40 percent of " city budget the market value of all real estate in the city. Those organizations get the benefit of police and fire protection and other municipal services without paying taxes, he said. "We can't force anybody to pay," said James Cooney, city. director of finance and personnel. PHYSICAL THERAPIST, Permanent full-time home health care HERITAGE HOSPiTAL 24775 Haig Ave. TAYLOR, MI 48180 (313) 295-330 Equal Opportunity Employer H APPENINGS- Highlight Detroit's progressive jazz quintet, Griot Galaxy, will perform at the University Club in the Michigan Union tonight. The concert, which begins at 9p.m. is part of the Eclipse Jazz Bright Moments Series. Films Cinema Guild - Fiddler on the Roof, 6 & 9:05 p.m., Lorch Hall. Cinema Two - Missing, 7 & 9:15 p.m., Angell Hall, Aud. A. Mediatrigs -Monty Python and the Holy Grail, 7:30 & 9:15 p.m., MLB. Alternative Action - Taxi Driver, 7 & 9 p.m., MLB 4. CFT - East of Eden, 5 & 9:30 p.m., Rebel Without a Cause, 7:30 p.m., & midnight, Michigan Theatre. AAFC - Tommy, 7 p.m., The Kids are Alright, 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Meetings Ann Arbor Go Club -2 p.m., 1433 Mason Hall. Tae Kwon Do Club - practice, 9 p.m., CCRB Martial Arts room. Muslim Students Assoc - discussion on events in Muslim world, 7 p.m., Internqtional Muslim House, 407 N. Ingalls. Miscellaneous Hillel - Storytelling by Joseph Buloff, 8 p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Ann Arbor Hands on Museum - "From Sun to Solar," instructional program for ages 12-adult, 10 a.m. Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity - Third annual tribute to the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., 7 p.m., Michigan League Ballroom. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Malicious Intent Blanchard urges speed- up in tax Daily Classifieds Bring Results cut plan I DELIVERS (Continued from Page 1) the " administration's overall recovery plan. Repulicans, however, said Blan- chard's proposal is merely an ad- mission that the people have been over- taxed since last spring when the tax was temporarily increased by 38 per- cent. House Republican Leader Michael Busch of Saginaw said the tax hike ac- tually caused a massive surplus in the state budget, which should be given back to taxpayers immediately. Senate Repulcian Leader John Engler of Mt. Pleasant, said the gover- nor has "publicly acknowledged that a tax cut is appropriate. The Legislature, I think, will be quick to deliver." "What he's thrown in is just one more proposal on how to make a tax cut," Engler said. Several methods of cutting taxes have been proposed in the Senate, by both Democrats and Republicans. One senator, John Kelly (D-Detroit) said he won't stop pushing his own rollback proposal. "This is not the final word on (a rollback)," said Kelly.Blanchard said that much of the talk about a surplus and rollback methods has been "reckless". 6 DAYS A WEEK Covering the U. OFM. like no one else! " LOCAL/CAMPUS NEWS * SPORTS " NATIONAL/WORLD NEWS " CLASSIFIEDS " EDITORIALS * ENTERTAINMENT Great News. A Great Price! ONLY $8.00 THIS SEMESTERI Subscribe Now! Detach form and return to 420 MAYNARD-CIRCULATION DEPT. (via Campus Mail) CALL 764-0558 -- - - -- - --- - -----------------------i Please fill in Mailing and Billing address NAME t MEANWILE' IN AN ARTER'Y.-.' 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