Ninety-;four Years of Editorial Freedom cl Ait 4gm 1 Iai1Q Disintegrating. Cloudy and cooler, with a high in the upper 60s. Vol. XCIV- No. 23 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, October 4, 1983 Fifteen Cents Ten Pages High court upholds Ill. town's gun law Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Partly cloudy? The Davis Construction Co. creates a haze of dust repairing the pedestrian bridge in front of the CCRB while students from "the hill" walk to and from central campus. Gunman robs student in dorm From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court in a major victory for advocates of tighter gun controls, yesterday refused to disturb a ruling that there is no constitutional right to own a pistol. The justices turned back challenges to a Morton Grove, Ill., ordinance that outlaws the possession, even in the home, of virtually all handguns. The court thus cleared the way for other communities to copy the ban. "The decision means a lot of small towns and villages will now pass laws based on our ordinance," said Morton Grove Mayor Richard Flickinger. "There is nowhere for the NRA to go." BUT spokespersons for the National Rifle Association predicted it would have no major legal impact. "Basically they (the justices) have not resolved anything," NRA spokesman Jack Adkins said. "They've merely thrown the ball back into the Illinois court system, opening, the door for the Illinois state supreme court to resolve the issue." The ordinance provides exceptions for peace officers, prison and security guards, licensed gun collectors and cer- tain others. All other residents were required to surrender their guns to local authorities. BY sustaining earlier rulings by a federal judge and a federal appeals court, the Supreme Court offered a big boost to numerous communities nationwide that have sought to emulate the 1981 ordinance, outlawing "any handguns unless the same has been rendered permanently inoperative." Eight residents of the Chicago suburb challenged the ban, arguing that it violates the Constitution's Second Amendment. It states: "A well- regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed." The Supreme Court by a single vote yesterday also refused to block Wed- nesday's scheduled execution of convic- ted Texas murderer James David Autry. The action cleared the way for Autry to become only the ninth U.S. prison inmate to be executed since the high court reinstated the death penalty as a constitutional punishment in 1976. . THE JUSTICES, by a 5-4 vote, rejec- ted an emergency request aimed at postponing the execution until lawyers for Autry could file a formal appeal. The court denied'Autry's first formal appeal last year. Voting to clear the way for Autry's execution were Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justices Byron R. White, Lewis F Powell, William H. Rehnquist and Sandra Day O'Connor. Voting to spare his life, at least tem- porarily, were Justices John Paul Stevens, William J. Brennan, Thurgood Marshall and Harry A. Blackmun. IN A dissenting opinion written by Stevens, the dissenters said Autry's emergency request "makes it clear that his claims are not frivolous." Autry, 28, was convicted and senten- ced to die by lethal injection for the April 20, 1980 shooting death of Shirley Drouet, 43, a Port Arthur convenience store clerk. Autry's Oct. 9, 1980 convicton was upheld by the Texas courts, and left in- tact by the Supreme Court last year. See SUPREME, Page 2 By MATT TUCKER Two men, asking an Alice Lloyd resident if he had any drugs, robbed the student at gunpoint late Sun- day night in a dormitory stairwell. Ann Arbor police said the two suspects, both black males in their 20s, asked for the victim by name among residents of the hall. Dorm officials, fearing that the" victim attracted threatening persons to the dorm, yesterday asked him to move out, and he is expected to leave today. POLICE SAID the suspects found the victim and led him to the end of a hall. After the student - whom police would not identify - said he didn't have any drugs, one of the suspects pulled out a handgun, poin- ted it at the victim's chest, and asked for money. The student gave the suspects between $60 and $70 before they fled on foot down Observatory Street, ac-' cording to one of the victim's hallmates. A University housing employee reported seeing the two men get in- to a late-model General Motors car. 14According. to Alice Lloyd staff :members, the victim was in another room when the suspects came looking for him. After the holdup, the victim and a dorm staff member alerted University security and police. IN A MEMO to dorm residents yesterday, Alice Lloyd Building Director David Schoem called the robbery an "isolated event" and said the suspects "were apparently looking specifically for the in- dividual who was victimized." Schoem also wrote that "drug dealing is a par- ticularly dangerous activity in the residence halls. It attracts people to the residence halls who, want money and drugs and who are willing to use weapons and force to get them." Schoem refused to comment further on the incident yesterday, but Damon Lim, an Alice Lloyd resident fellow, confirmed last night that the victim would be moving out of the dorm tomorrow. Lim said building officials told the victim that he was a threat to other residents and asked him to leave. Airlines struggle to stay in business I Councli makes Di'ag alcohol ban a city law From AP and UPI HOUSTON - A 3-day-old strike by pilots and flight attendants forced Con- tinental Airlines to cancel one flight and consolidate another yesterday, but the carrier said it would expand its schedule later in the week and might hire outside pilots while Eastern Airlines non-union employees voted to take a 15 percent pay cut. "Right now, we are looking ahead to M when we are going to rebuild our schedule," said airline spokesman Bruce Miller. "We have begun to con- tact furloughed Continental employees and we are making inquiries in the marketplace." A Chicago-to-Houston flight was scrapped yesterday when the plane scheduled to be in Chicago did not arrive the night before. In addition, two Texas flights from Austin to San An- tonio to Houston were consolidated into one, Miller said. The strike by members of the Air Line Pilots Association and the Union of Flight Attendants forced the can- cellation of nine flights Sunday due to lack of flight crews. About 300 strikers demonstrated yesterday outside the airline's offices near Houston's Intercontinental 'Air- port. Picketing also continued at Con- tinental's airport terminal and at boar- ding gates. "I think the company needs to know that if Continental Airlines is going to try to operate without us, not only have they lost their professional skilled labor force, but we want the public to know we're out here," Linda Downing, a spokeswoman for flight attendants, said. Meanwhile, in another airline dispute, Eastern announced yesterday that its non-union employees over- whelmingly accepted a 15 percent pay cut, which Chairman Frank Borman said was necessary to keep the struggling airline in business. Borman told the company's 37,500 workers in a videotaped message that Eastern would have to turn to bankrup- tcy court or cease operations if workers did not agree to the pay cuts. Some union leaders vehemently objected to Borman's proposal. By TRACEY MILLER Ann Arbor City Council last night ap- proved an ordinance prohibiting alcohol consumption on the Diag, trailing by over a, month the Univer- sity's installation of signs announcing the ban. The 6-5 vote - split along party lines - came after a Councilmember Larry Hunter (D-1st Ward) suggested the council table the proposal until more in- formation on the drinking ban and the University's attitude was available. HUNTER criticized a city and University relations committee for not discussing the issue with University of- ficials prior to the vote. However Councilmember Lowell Peterson (D-lst Ward) said the Univer- sity suggested the drinking restriction "because they knew it would pass" the council. City Council previously voted to prohibit alcohol from some, public parks and. later from city streets. Peterson said council Democrats voted against those measures. But Republican Richard Deem (2nd Ward) lauded the effort. "I feel a ban would be a step in the right direction. I know there is a problem with women walking at night through the Diag," he said. Mayor Louis Belcher said the problem is caused not by University students, but by high school students who drink in the Diag. Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS Holocaust survivor speaks Noted Jewish author and holocaust survivor, Elie Wiesel, speaks at Rackham Auditorium Sunday about the role of Jews today. See story, page 3. TODAY- Home cooking TOWA STATE UNIVERSITY isn't giving up on in- will be served, a copy of the fall menu showing their recipe, and a copy of their recipe - expanded to serve 100. El Health Service on hold [F YOU'VE BEEN dying to see a doctor lately and gave University Health Services a ring to arrange a rendezvous with one of those people in a white coat, you telephone lines are filled with callers. Instead of the normal busy signal callers get when all the incoming phone lines are full, there is the disconnection tape recording, she said. Michigan Bell has been notified, Puffe said, and the phones should have been fixed by 5 p.m. Monday. This is the first time that such a problem has occured with Health Service phones, Puffe said. Puffe said she suggests that if students do get the disconnection recording that they try again a lit- tle later. If this fails, she said, students can either stop by the building to make an appointment or walk over to the Urgent Care section of the clinic, open from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. University astronomy professor said the two women probably saw either a strong reflection from the ground or an airplane. Also on this date in history: * 1949 - The Daily joined other University organizations in urging football ticket holders for the Army-Michigan game to donate their tickets to disabled war veterans staying in local hospitals. * 1968 - A graduate student was in critical condition after he was shot by an unidentified assailant while crossing the Diag. * 1971 - The Senate Assembly endorsed a policv