Page 10-Thursday, July 29, 1982-The Michigan Daily 'I HA TE SAN FRANCISCO' CAMPAIGN PROTESTS NEW LAW Frisco handgun ban begins SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- One of the nation's strictest handgun bans took ef- fect here yesterday, amid lawsuits and an "I Hate San Francisco" campaign organized by opponents. Residents have 90 days to hand in their pistols or face a six-month jail term. However, District Attorney Arlo Smith has said he won't prosecute anyone until the state appeal court decides whether the ordinance is con- stitutional, and police have no plans to go door-to-door looking for guns. THE CITY plans to grant exemptions for merchants, security guards and other citizens who can demonstrate a need to own a gun. Rifles and shotguns will still be legal, and residents will not needa permit to own such weapons. The ban squeaked past the city- county Board of Supervisors on a 6-5 vote June 30 and has been the subject of widespread debate in this city, where Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk were killed with a han- dgun at City Hall in November 1978. Opposition organized quickly and loudly after the ban was first proposed this spring by Moscone's successor, Mayor Dianne Feinstein. The mayor, who was given a gun when she suc- ceeded Moscone, has been a proponent of gun control and said her proposal was spurred by a similar ban enacted in Morton Grove, Ill., last year. IN BELLEVUE, Wash., the Citizens Committee to Keep and Bear Arms began an "I Hate San Francisco" cam- paign, featuring bumper stickers with a black slash over a bright red heart. According to Mike Kenyon, executive director for the group, the campaign is a two-pronged effort tht will urge con- ventions and tourists to stay away from the city by the bay. The group is also raising funds to defet supervisors who favor the ban. "We fell it's an unnecessary in- fringement on the civil rights fo the people of San Francisco," Kenyon said Tuesday. THE NATIONAL Rifle Association has filed a lawsuit to stop the ban, claiming that state law pre-empts cities in the area of gun control. "We don't hate San Francisco," said NRA spokesman John Atkins. "But we certainly are at odds with Dianne Feinstein and the other super- visors who voted for the ban. "WE FIND IT very doubtful that very many San Franciscans are going to turn in their handguns . . . certainly nobody expects the criminal element to suddenly come up to City Hall and say 'OK, Dianne, here's my gun," he said. Atkins says the new law wouldn't have kept a gun out of the hands of Dan White, the former supervisor who gun- ned down Moscone and Milk. White, he noted, is a former police officer and probably would have gotten an exem- ption. White is serving a seven-year, eight-month sentence for manslaughter in the Moscone-Milk slayings. Only 15 handguns have been surren- dered to police since an "advance turn- in" program began after the measure was signed into law 30 days ago. Lawmakers eat trash to show food surplus 'Whorehouse' can't. rise above mediocrity (Continued from Page 7) his career. Will Sheriff Dodd be forced to close the Chicken Ranch? Or will he punch Thorpe in the face again? And what of the clandestine love-affair twixt Dodd and Miss Mona? It's all pretty tame stuff as directed by Colin Higgins, the man who wrote Harold and Maude and directed Foul Play and Nine to Five. Higgins' direction has always had the same washed-out look, in Whorehouse that effect simply underscores the charade of this musical. Except for the chorus there's almost no one in the film who is capable of singing and dan- cing: not Dolly Parton, not Burt Reynolds; and certainly not Dom DeLuise. The one exception to this is Charles Durning as the fast-talking Governor of Texas who sings a delightful song of praise to political double-talk. It's the kind of bit-part that is perfect for Durning; he turns it into the most charismatic moment in a film that should be full of them. Besides Durning there's not too much that is memorable in this bland little film. There's nothing even approaching a show-stopping number. Though Par- ton apparently wrote certain songs her- self, they are certainly no improvement over the original music. On the other hand, there is nothing too embarrassing in Whorehouse. Most of the cast acquits themselves adequately, but musicals have to be much more than adequate to work. Silly musicals need good songs and strong performances all around; Whorehouse is a little weak all over. WASHINGTON (AP)- Sen. Edward Kennedy and five House members lun- ched yesterday on quiche, fruit salad and assorted other foods that had been scrounged from trashcans of food wholesalers and supermarkets. "Very good," said Kennedy, a Massachesetts Democrat, adding that the luncheon demonstrates the "enor- mous waste" of food in this country while thousands of people go hungry.. The event was designed to promote a House measure urging federal agencies to share surplus food with the needy. THE LUNCHEON was delayed more than half an hour by a bomb scare. Four Democratic congressmen- Reps. Tony Hall, Douglas Applegate and Dennis Eckart, all of Ohio; and Pete Stark of California-had gathered behind a display table laden with food gathered from trash containers when policemen announced the bomb threat and cleared the room for a search. No bomb was found, but as a precaution the food was moved to another room across the hall in the: Rayburn office building. THERE, HALL Eckart and Stark were joined for lunch by Kennedy and two other Democratic representatives, Barbara Kennelly of Connecticut and Charles Schumer of New York. Ap- plegate had to leave to keep another appointment. "Good," said Eckart of his lunch of mushroom quiche, cheese, beans and potatoes au gratin. "It underscores the point that there is a terrible over-concern about the ap- pearance of food (in stores). Some of this food was ready for destruction just because the package was damaged." HALL AND Rep: Mary Rose Oakar (D-Ohio) organized the luncheon to promote a House resolution calling on federal agencies to distribute surplus food and urging local governments to encourage steps to recover and use un- spoiled foods discarded by dealers. The Washington-based Community- for Creative Nonviolence, which prepared the luncheon, says its volun- teers feed 750 to 1,000 needy people a day with food that is discarded by supermarkets and food wholesalers because it is slightly damaged. The group massed hundreds of poun- ds of food for television and cameras- huge baskets of rolls, piles of cold cuts and cheese, boxes of eggplant and other fresh produce. MITCH SNYDER, one of 20 members of the volunteer group, said they use a local church kitchen four days a week to prepare soup-kitchen meals. On other days, they cook on a stove in their 12-room inner city apartment. Gandhi aims to improve U.S.-India relations (Continued from Page4) relationship with the Soviets. They have also been irritated over India's refusal to sign the nuclear non- proliferation treaty or to place all its nuclear facilities under international safeguards. India always has been officially non- aligned. But many U.S. officials, citing the treaty ties between Moscow and New Delhi and the extensive Soviet military equipment India has received, believe there is a strong pro-Soviet tilt. Gandhi denies this, saying that at no stage has India been in the Soviet camp. PRIVATE analysts of Indian affairs note that New Delhi's relationship with Moscow has been extensive and will not' be ended soon. 4 4 + 4 U o 0 o Subscribe to (I i Jti au Y 7IQ Score 7wit0e 764-0558 4 4 4