Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, August 9, 1983 Anchorwoman wins sex discrimination suit KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) - Television anchorwoman Christine Craft, who said her boss demoted her because she was too old and unattrac- tive, won her sex discrimination suit yesterday against Metromedia Inc. and was awarded $375,000. Craft, 38, smiled as the jury foreman read the decision. The four-woman, two-man jury then returned to deliberations to decide if she was en- titled to punitive damages. THE JURY deliberated about nine hours before ruling in favor of the an- chorwoman in the suit against Metromedia, former owner of KMBC- TV. The jury also said Metromedia was not in violation of the equal pay law. Craft sued Metromedia for rein- statement as a co-anchorwoman, $200,000 in double back wages and $1 million in damages. She claimed a former boss at KMBC-TV said she was too old, too unattractive and not deferential to men when she was demoted from a co-anchor position to reporter two years ago. Craft admitted she left the station on her own rather than take a demotion to reporter, but claimed she was fired from the position for which she was hired - co-anchor of the prime-time evening news. Craft was hired in December, 1980 to co-anchor KMBC-TV's 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. newscasts, but was demoted the next August after the station conducted a viewer survey through Media Associates of Dallas. Apes help scientist learn about humans EAST LANSING (UPI) - Modern of the great apes of Africa and has used parents could benefit from "aping" the results as models for human some of the ways in which gorillas and behavior in the child-rearing process. orangutans relate to their young, a He said these apes have exceptionally psychologist said yesterday at close parent-infant bonds which help to Michigan State University. promote confidence and security in Terry Maple - a comparative everyday activities. psychologist at the Georgia Institute of Parents must try not to keep children Technology - told members of the distant from their own lives, Maple American Society of Primatologists he said. For example, he said, even very is interested in studying what animals small children should eat meals with can tell humans about themselves. their parents. Maple conducted behavioral studies Gay rights activists ask for equal treatment at rally IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports U.S. begins talks with Saudi leaders on Palestinian conflict MIDEAST - Rival Palestinian factions battled in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley yestcuday as U.S. Middle East envoy Robert McFarlane conferred with Saudi Arabian leaders on negotiating a removal of foreign forces from the country.) The renewed fighting between factions supporting and opposed to Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yasser Arafat came as Syria said it shot downa pilotless Israeli spy plane over Lebanon and accused the United States of representing the Israeli viewpoint in the region. the battles between the Palestinian factions took place near the city of Chtaura, 22 miles east of Beirut in the Bekaa Valley, Beirut radio said. The radio gave no indication of the casualties. Syria's official radio in Damascus radio said Syrian gunners in the Bekaa Valley shot downa remote-controlled Israel8i spy plane when the craft tried to fly over their positions. An Israeli army spokesman in Tel Aviv said he knew nothing of the incident. Army takes over Guatemala GUATELMALA CITY - Army troops shot their way into the presidential palace and overthrew the goverment of Efrian Rios Montt yesterday in the second military coup in Guatemala in 17 months. Rios Montt's place as head of the government was taken on a provisional basis by the defense minister, Gen. Oscar Humberto Mejia, 58. He said two presidential guards and a civilian were killed in the coup. The president of the Supreme Court, Ricardo Sagastums Vidaurra, swore in the new military president at the National Palace, the seat of government, yesterday afternoon. An unconfirmed report said Rios Montt and some supporters were holding out in the Presidential House, adjacent to the National Palace. Earlier, Guatemalan radio reports said as many as five were killed and 25 wounded in the fighting around the presidential palace that involved machine gune and mortar fire. A U.S. embassy spokesman said the fighting continued for about 90 minutes. Mejia pledged in a news conference to legalize political parties and to go ahead with plans for a constituent assembly election next July that would lead eventually to presidential balloting. Libyans attack Chad NDJAMENH, Chad - Chad's embattled government said its forces came under new Libyan air raids yesterday, and Libyan pilots were ordered to shoot down U.S. AWACS spy planes interfering with Libyan operations. A Libyan pilot whose Soviet-built plane was shot down said Libyan crews dropping thousands of pounds of napalm and fragmentation bombs on targets in northern Chad were acting on the direct orders of Col. Moammar Khadafy. Some 1,200 miles to the west, the pro-Libyan officer who seized power in Upper Volta in a coup Friday said Khadafy took it on himself to send aircraft laden with supplies to his country. "We have courteously requested the Libyan authorities not to continue the airlift, which we did not ask for," said Capt. Thomas Sankara, speaking in his capital, Ouagadougou, in an interview broadcast over French radio. The situation in Chad, where for six weeks Libyan-supported rebels loyal to ousted president Goukouni Weddeye have been fighting to topple President Hissene Habre, was described by the Reagan administration as serious. Nicaraguan officials call U.S. commission military ploy WASHINGTON - Top-ranking Nicaraguan government officials charged yesterday that the Reagan administration is using the Kissinger commission and prospects of Central American peace negotiations to stall for time while it focuses on an armed effort to topple the Sandinista government. The administration "has no real desire for dialogue," said Saul Arana, former ambassador to the Organization of American States and the top U.S. expert in the Nicaraguan foreign ministry. Arana, who is visiting Washington, said the administration's decision to send U.S. warships and hold military maneuvers in Honduras reflects the failure of CIA-supported guerrillas to threaten the Sandinista government despite two years of trying. "The presence of the American fleet means the covert actions of the CIA have been defeated," Arana said at a briefing at the Nicaraguan embassy here for American reporters. The new Nicaraguan ambassador, Antonio Jarquin, said he met last week with former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, head of the ad- ministration's commission on Central America, but still doesn't know what the panel's role is. He said Kissinger, who requested the meeting, told him the commission wants to visit Nicaragua and Jarquin assured him he would be welcome. He said Kissinger stressed the commission would not be involved in negotiations, but would focus on long-range policy. I I I A 4 (conunuedfrom Page 3) JOEY LEIBER, carrying a briefcase and wearing a dark suit, said he thinks rallies will help get laws against gay discrimination passed, although they still may not eliminate prejudice. The gay community "needs to (per- suade), more straight people to see that gay people are not a threat to them and then everything will fall into place," Leiber said. Jean Galley, a spokesman for Dignity, a gay Catholic organization which meets at St. Mary's church, said that he had originally planned to be a priest but was forced to change his plans when rumor spread that he might be a homosexual. THROUGHOUT his struggle to ex- press his gayness, Galley said, "my spirituality has really helped me. "I feel very confident about myself and I know that God is going to make this a safe place for us." Some at the rally though, such as Chris Coatney think God views gays in quite a different light. Coatney, who carried a Bible and a sign saying "Get smart, go straight, stop perversion now!" said "Homosexuality is a sin because men are not built to have sex with men, and women are not built to have sex with women." COATNEY said he had considered becoming a homosexual himself at one time, but said the love of God turned him around. "I've been in mental hospitals, jail and I have masturbated ... I used to be deceived like they are," he said. "I just want to let them know they are headed for hell. I want to save them." Coatney also said he is trying to begin an anti-pornography group in the area which would try to close down bookstores that sell pornographic items. SINCE THE beginnng of the year, a group calling itself the Lesbian and Gay Rights on Campus (LaGROC) has been campaigning to require the University to state that it will not discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation. University President Harold Shapiro however, has not told the group whether the University will support such a policy, Mack said. David Piontkowsky, a Southfield at- torney, said many of the state's laws don't offer protection to gay people. But that may change next month, he added, when an amendment will be introduced to the Michigan Civil Rights Act to in- clude a clause prohibiting discrimination against gay men and lesbians. PIONTOWSKY said the amendment will be introduced in the House of Representatives next month by a con- servative Republican from the west side of the state, but he did not give the name of the representative. To some at the rally, though, amen- dments and lobbying will never be enough to stop hatred toward gays. A spokeswoman from the Revolutinary Workers League said the growing right wing is attacking the rights of gays and lesbians and "oppressed" people must fight for their views. 0