The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, June 2,.1982-Page 11 A PISTOL IN EVERY HOME? Gun ownership becomes city law KENNESAW, Ga. (AP) - Man- datory gun ownership became the law in this Atlanta suburb yesterday, and housewife Karen Martin said it comfor- ted her to know that if someone broke into her duplex, she "could get rid of them real fast." The implementation of the new law brought the city another wave of publicity and a legal challenge from the American Civil Liberties Union but lit- tle in the way of reaction from residen- ts. "I DON'T FEEL any different" having a gun in the house now, said - Martin, who added, "It feels good to know if any body came in here, you cold get rid of them real fast." She said her husband borrowed a gun from his brother in nearby Car- tersyille, . She said her husband and MSU fraternity photograph criticized as racist (Continued from Page 3) members of the MSU black community } last week. That meeting "helped us gain a better understanding of the black community," he said. MSU's Anti-discrimination Judicial Board will decide whether to take disciplinary action against the frater- nity, according to MSU Assistant Vice President for Student Affairs Jim Studer. 1 Studer defended MSU Greek Adviser Jan Curshman, whose resignation has been demanded by the Lansing NAACP and other groups. Curshman had been aware of the statue in the Theta Chi photograph several weeks before the Greek Week supplement was published, he said, but she had told the photographer to either take a new photograph or alter the old one. He said- the photographer had told Curahman that the photo had been changed. "Somehow, another print got in the paper. Nobody knows how that hap- pened," he said. Curshman referred all questions to Studer. STAFF MEMBERS in the State News advertising department, which handled the publication of the supplement, said they were not aware of the statue in the photograph before it was published. General Manager Allen Swartzell said the photographs for the supplement were received so late that they weren't examined very closely. I would hope that I would have pulled it," if the statue had been noticed earlier, Swartzell said, but he added such speculation was "like playing 'Monday morning quarterback.' " He said he had no intention of resigning. "There was no overt act of malice anywhere along the way," Swartzell said. He blamed the situation on a "general lack of understanding of the sensibilities of others." 'It feels good to know if anybody came in here, you could get rid of them real fast. ' -Karen Martin, Kennesaw resident two of their four children have handled guns while hunting, and she does not consider the weapon a safety hazard. "The kids don't even know where it is. they didn't even ask," she said. THE ORDINANCE, adopted unanimously by the city council March 15, requires heads of households in the city if 5,400 people to own and maintain a firearm and ammunition. It exempts convicted felons, the disabled and those with religious objections. The council acknowledged it was reacting against passage of an ordinan- ce in the Chicago suburb of Morton Grove which bans ownership of han- dguns by most private citizens. Dave Collier, owner of a downtown hardware store, said the law has brought "very little interest" and rio in- creased deman for ammunition or guns. THE LAW HAS no penalty provision, but Mayor Darvin Purdy said yester- day the council has interpreted the city code to require a $5 fine for violations. Purdy said there will be no "vigorous enforcement." Meanwhile, the American Civil Liberties Union asked a federal court in Atlanta to prohibit any enforcement of the law, Gene Guerrero, executive secretary of the ACLU in Georgia, said. Gerrrero, who said the ACLU acted in behalf of Kennesaw resident Richard Butler, termed the law "an illegal, un- constitutinal taking of liberty and an invasion of privacy in that the gover- nment of Kennesaw is telling people what they must do without any showing of any compelling reason to do so." Purdy said the ACLU's action proved "they're not interested in protecting civil liberties or constitutinal rights." Purdy listed national recognition first when asked about the law's effects on the city, previously known mainly as the site of a Civil War battle. He also said attendance at a city-owned museum "is.substantially up." Daily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS Diag diversion What better way to pass time than to kick off your shoes and stretch out on one of the Diag's inviting benches. SENIEiR B~ctciooM CALWMDA Z 5~vIA~liaH&'TbM SUVN MON 'EE tI~.= A FM NIT GREtK( Nt1E NB "- \jP F' Nt'f'I t- 41' LAPtK KCEbje9 q.L AMlKAz E SN6t LAANER Ge AT Tw5 o~--i I soyt J 1toii 1 I' ys Mcpa 01 2 . RA'4CALLN 22 2.3 1) UNK w w W fOL. 27 S 'lo , T$ q 30 DO N' T ER G E T. I 5i )C7 R ANNUAL 3oO O oAT"" NWs b iExcwrN6 ao5 ' M'S NtT N 'Z e fMO SEP.r