Wednesday, January 9, 1985/The Battalion/Page 3 tate & Local L su bstan nat? ^ Baders, '°tect m on-gay student active n GSS to support others ut are, I thecr ;o - Citi >n fori defe» ByMARK VIGUET Reporter A "straight" in the Gay Student le enoii ervices? Impossible? Not quite. Lynn Scannapieco, a junior bi- llogv major, is a non-gay member of ^SS, the group battling in tlie courts ' ‘* s fnejl) r official university recognition. e rigflll Although she didn’t join until last lemester, Scannapieco (list learned ^VernnJ organization last \eai. “A friend of mine irom school iild me he was gay, and I met people the group through him and l)l ect th, Cts of timber ‘ s thattl ds face 1 crime, but o hinalsdi bes. nt of 111 in mimi 'Hit con 'igilante time, ct th i i me uiitru^i „ av e bfl earned about GSS." she said. Scannapieco decided to become a ourcoii Wilber when she discovered how ttrys^ lard it was for her gay friends to talk * lathers about their lifestvle. “I saw that it was extremely difli- ult going to parents and friends ith tnis type of thing, and I wanted ofeel like 1 could do something to lelp,’’ Scannapieco said. "I felt like nysupport meant so much to them. } ~ ‘ uv .' also joined for the same reason w . 11111 myone else joins a group— because believe in what they stand lor. “It doesn’t matter to me what a “ter otht arson's sexual preference is: that’s E rsonal choice. To me it’s compa- eto the color of someone’s skin, treally shouldn’t Ik- a basis for prej- idice." Scannapieco says the moral sup- i°csmAort is one of the most important tthoritic straights can give to the [roup. “Tney are in such a minority here, hey love to know that some in the najority support gav rights," S<.m- "1 joined for (he same rea son anybody else joins a group - because / believe in w hat they stand for. ” — Lynn Scannapieco, non gay CSS member napieco said. “At a fund-raiser, someone once gave a good sum of money to help with their legal costs, and you just wouldn’t believe how happy those people were to know there was support from outside the group. ’’He can also talk to other straights about gays. I mean, these are people with rights just like any one else. They are extremely intelli gent and great to be around. I think of them as my friends, not my gay’ friends." Harassment has not been a prob lem as a result of her involvement with the group. "II I’m witn someone who’s gay, people will often think I’m gay, but it doesn’t bother me,” she said. “Most just want to know why I’m in the group." Her parents, however, do not look kindly on the fact that she has gay friends. “My brother is very supportive of mv involvement in the group, but mv parent’s don’t know I'm in the group yet," she said. “They know I have gav friends, but don’t approve of it." Scannapieco says the Board of Re gents’ decision to fight the group is the result of outside pressure. “I personally think much of it comes from old Ags who say it doesn’t uphold the traditional atmo sphere here — but that certainly isn’t a legal basis to ref use a club recogni tion,” she said. “I think the Regents realize that the former students would get furious if the they didn’t show they were at least trying to put up a light. “The main reason university rec ognition is important will be univer sity-approved advertising,” she said. “Many people come to meetings now who are so scared, they won’t even give their names, but at least they come. The advertising will help us get to the people that need to know we’re here." Scannapieco believes the fight for gay rights is comparable to the black’s fight for equality. "I think the civil rights movement laid the foundation for other mi nority groups, including gays, to speak out in defense of their rights,” sue said. “The light for civil rights still isn’t complete, and it’s been going on for such a long time. I sense that the atmosphere in general is becoming more tolerant toward gay rights, but it will take a long time." “People become frightened be cause of the fact the group will be recognized,” she said. “Gays are out there now in your classes, walking across campus; maybe you even bump into them. ” Photo by ANTHONY S. CASPER High and low Looking for textbooks at the MSC bookstore are Robert Faw cett, a senior education major, and Stephanie Sobotik, a ju nior sociology major. Bookstore lines were short Tuesday but are expected to increase as the week continues. fry of, ii major r Band ^Children play according to traditional patterns University News Service Despite efforts to de-emphasi/e iexually oriented roles witn chil- Jren, preschool lioys ami girls con- inue to choose activities that follow raditional patterns, a Texas A&M study indicates. In a study designed to examine the relationship in children In-tween creativity and different ty pes of play materials, doctoral stutient Marc Rogers found there were distinct patterns in boys' and girls’ c hoices of play centers. Her can J insect lowabli ling the ie kinc ‘eat cati 7 pint, yukky -verage iut but quench om C. 10 fly ces. ordin] ive 151 s. And he was id de- lietary >g Ad- prod found So go IrlJlSW e Bat- Choices of the 26 girls and 23 boys who were 3, -4 and 5 years old re- flecied a preference for activities that follow traditional patterns, said Rogers, who received his Ph.D. in educational psychology in Decem- ber. “This is supposed to be an andro gynous stage of development, but there were sex differences in the children’s choices of play materials,” he said. Among the 23 play centers avail- center, a block center, a doll center and a dress-up center which in cluded firemen and military uni forms. Rogers observed the children dur ing 45-minute periods and mea sured the amount of time each cen ter occupied a child in one-minute intervals and then came up with a to tal number of minutes for boys and girls at each center. constitute a total of two minutes for the center. Out of a total of 5,536 minutes of play time, boys spent zero minutes with dolls while girls played 142 minutes with the dolls, Rogers said. Boys played 49 minutes with the home center while girls played 340 minutes at the center. For able to the children were a home one minute at the doll center example, two girls playing ~ would Boys played with the blocks 466 minutes while girls played with blocks only 96 minutes and boys played zero minutes at the dress-up center while girls played at the same center 240 minutes. Rogers also found boys engaged in “tomfoolery” behavior three times as much as girls during the observed play periods. “The current belief that males and females are coming together does not seem to be true,” he said. “Ghildren are reflecting more tradi tional roles than ever. “The toy industry is saying boys and gii Is like the same kind of toys and that doesn’t seem to be true.” Klan plans to oppose ordinance United Press International HOUSTON—The ku klux Klan plans to demonstrate in front of city hall Saturday against a proposed or dinance giving homosexuals equal protection in city jobs, the Texas grand dragon said Tuesday. “Basically it’s an anti-homosexual and anti-kathy Whitmire demon stration,” Charlie Lee said. “The mayor's efforts to pass these ordinances providing homosexual equalilty is far beyond her public duty. “To let some of her aides oil so they can go out and work for the campaign lor homosexual rights is really too much as far as we’re con cerned and we feel somebody needs to speak up against it.” Whitmire s top political aide has taken a leave of absence to campaign for passage of the referendum schecluled for Jan. 19 on the job dis crimination issue. The referendum was forced by a public petition after City Council in June passed a resolution and ordi nance adding sexual orientation to the list of factors — including race, sex, age and national origin — that cannot be considered in city hiring, firing and promotions. “The main reason (for the dem onstration) is we’re going to get out there to demonstrate to let the pub lic know it is an important issue. Lee said. The Houston Chamber of Com merce also is urging Houstonians to vote against the ordinance. Lee said he expects 75 to 100 klansmen at the rally at City Hall. I he protesters then plan to distrib ute anti-homosexual pamphlets on Main Street, he said. “We don’t want homosexuals to have equality in being hired by the police department or the fire de partment,” L.ee said. 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