' IYoU iENEVS PPERO MX C '>.Y Take ten Thomas Hayden, one of the co-founders of Students for a Democratic Society and a former Universityactivist, together with Jerry Rubin, self-styled Yippie revolutionist, burned subpoenas to appear before the House Committee on Un-Amercian Activities (HUAC) on September 23, 1968. Both said their actions on the. University of California's Berkeley campus represented their contempt for HUAC. Also that Monday, the Soviet Union agreed in principle to withdraw all but 100,000 of the half million troops occupying Czechoslovakia by Oct. 28, 1968. Happenings... get off to an early start at 9 with a rummage sale at the First Baptist Church, 502 E. Huron. The sale runs until 3.. . "Christians and Institutional Power" will be the topic of a panel discussion in the Pendleton Room of the Union. The discussion runs from 10-12, then breaks for lunch and resumes from 1:30-3:30 ... Ann Schlitt will talk about the Universxity's affirmative action program and Title IX at a noon luncheon at Guild House, 802 Monroe.. . tune in as the Wolverines battle the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame. Kick-off time is 12:4°. The game will be broadcast on radio and TV ... celebrate the autunmal equinox with the folks from the Wholistic Health Council with a day of festivities in the Ab. There will be a potluck lunch at 1 followed by music , dancing and volleyball... Kenny Burrell discusses Duke Ellington and the history of jazz at'2 in Rackham Auditorium. . . the Yugoslav Film Festival continues in Auditorium A of Angell Hall with a 2 o'clock showing of "Don't Lean Over." followed by "The Widowhood od Karolina Zasler" at 4.. . John Stcokwell and Morton Halperin talk about "Government Spying" at 8 in Rackham Auditorium ... the Yoga Center of Ann Arbor will hold an autumnal equinox disco dance at 8 at the Center, 207 E. Ann . .. traditional Slichot services will be held at Hillel, 1429 Hill, at 11:30. Heavy booty A Louisiana bank robber may not have had much sense when he walked into the Bank of New Orleans Thursday and announced a hold- up, but he sure had.a lot of cents when he left. The robber ordered a teller to hand over a bulging money bag he spotted on a table. But he was surprised to find he had to struggle to lug the bag out the door as he escaped: the bag was full of pennies. Total loot for his efforts: $50. Like they say, crime doesn't pay. Guilty as charged You've got to give Dennis Wright credit. For 18 months, that's just what scores of London stores have been doing. Wright, 28, used a sheaf of stolen credit cards for a shopping spree and ended up setting a record at London's Old Bailey Criminal Court. He finally pleaded guilty to 20 theft charges and asked that 806 other crimes ''be taken into consideration." He was sentenced to four years in prison. It was the largest number of offenses ever listed against one person at the Old Bailey, which has been in business for 900 years. Asking that uncharged offenses be considered is similar to plea bargaining and is used to clear police records and court calendars. On the outside... Who says Notre Dame's got the market cornered on the luck of the Irish? We've lucked out weather-wise today. It will be mostly sunny and cool with a high near 70 - Murder law ruled not discriminatory Supermarke 'bread' air By The Associated Press A small but steadily growing number' of supermarkets are offering shoppers the opportunity to do their banking where they do their buying and a new study indicates that consumers - with some reservations - like the idea.- Some of the in-store electronic funds, transfer (EFT) systems make it easier for customers to cash checks to pay for groceries. Others offer a complete range of banking services through, automatic cash machines. A STUDY conducted for the Food Marketing Institute (FMI) and the Bank Administration Institute (BAI), showed that customers who used the systems were generally satisfied, although they reported some dif- ficulties with machine breakdowns.- Non-users, in contrast, were apathetic and saw little need for the card- operated services. "A clear need exists for effective backup procedures," said the survey, prepared by Willard Bishop, Consulting Economists of Barrington, Ill. "Without adequate backup, customers are slow to build confidence in the system. In addition, the absence of backup can discourage regular use of the service because there is considerable customer inconvenience accompanying the long interruptions in service." The whole subject of electronic money handling has come under, scrutiny by Congress. Legislation is pending to establish safeguards for consumers by limiting customer liability for unauthorized withdrawals. AT PRESENT, most of the automatic terminals are located just outside financial institutions, but, where state law permits, they are spreading to shopping centers and other non- banking areas. The most frequently used systems in supermarkets are the simplest. They permit a customer to obtain authorization for cashing a check by in- serting the check, a personal iden- tification number and a plastic card in an electronic terminal. Seventy-four per cent or almost three-fourths of the cardholders surveyed in the FMI and BAI study said they used the check- cashing service. Sixty-two per cent of the card users said they had no problems with the system: the rest reported problems ranging from broken machines to forgotten iden- tification numbers. "The primary benefit of this service to the customer was to speed up service at the checkout," the survey found. It also showed that-consumers wouldlike a universal check-cashing card that would permit them to cash checks in all stores with a single piece of plastic. A second kind of EFT system offered by supermarkets allows customers to con- duct banking transactions with the aid of a clerk. Cardholders can cash checks, withdraw or deposit money and transfer funds from one account to another. SIXTY-EIGHT per cent of the car- t banking: id butter, dholders surveyed said they used this system. They said they liked being ab- le to do their banking outside regular banking hours and avoid trips to the bank. Asked what, if anything, they dis- liked about the system, customers most often mentioned operating problems - either with the machines or the person- nel - and delays. "The major opportunity for im- provement relates to the lines and delays occurring at the courtesy booth," the survey concluded. "This congestion appears even at relatively low transaction volumes and is a source of considerable frustration." Automatic tellers, also known as cash machines, drew the fewest users. Only 53 per cent of cardholders surveyed said they had used them. Forty-one per cent of the users expressed specific dislikes ranging from system malfun- ctions to the lack of personal contact. TWENTY-FI E per cent or one- fourth of all cardholders said they had trouble remembering their personal identification number; 16 per cent said they were concerned about making deposits via the automatic tellers since they did not have immediate access to the money they had put in their accoun- ts. CINEMA II presents Char e is let loose in the chocolate factory and every kid s dream comesttrue. C DAV L WOLPER GENE JACK WLDER ALBERTSON TONITE ON LY A NGE LL H AL L Tus - Heri g uetre Aud."A" P.M. Adults $1.50 Kids 754 SUN.: The original of "Heaven Can Wait"-1941's HERE COMES MR. JORDAN SCHEDULE CHANGE- Tues. - Hezog Docment.ries (Not Wed. 1) The Michigan Daily-Saturday, September 23, 1978-Page 3 DAILY EARLY BIRD MATINEES - Adults S .25 DISCOUNT IS FOR SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 1:30 MON. thru SAT. 10 A.M. tit 1:30 P.M. SUN. & HOLS. 12 Noon til 1:30 P.M. EVENING ADMISSIONS AFTER 5:00, $3.50 ADULTS Monday-Saturday 1:30-5:00, Admission $2.50 Adult and Students Sundays and Holidays 1:30 to Close, $3.50 Adults, $2.50 Students Sunday-Thursday Evenings Student & Senior Citizen Discounts Children 12 And Under, Admissions $1.25 TICKET SALES 1. Tickets sold no sooner than 30 minutes prior to showtiine. 2. No tickets sold later than 15 minutes after showtime. LANSING (UPI) - Separate Michigan Court of Appeals panels ruled yesterday Michigan's felony murder law does not discriminate unduly against men in rape cases and fits in with the state's new sexual assault statute. In both cases, the appeals court said a the state legislature did not intend to change the murder law when it ap- proved a new statute governing sexual assaults which dropped the term "rape" and replaced it with "first degree criminal sexual conduct." THAT LAW TOOK effect April 1, 1975. In the murder statute, a mandatory life prison term is provided for persons convicted of rape and murder. However, defendants Jeffery Terry in a Macomb County Circuit Court case and Lee McDonald in Wayne County argued before the appeals court that the new sexual assault law, by striking THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LIX, No. 15 Saturday, September 23 1978 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Secon~d class postage ispaid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscriptionrates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail, outside Ann Arbor. Summer" session published through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00by mail outside Ann Arber. the term "rape," abolished the rape- murder provisions of the felony murder statute. TERRY WAS convicted of first degree murder and McDonald was found guilty but mentally ill of first degree murder.'In both cases, the vic- tims were 14-year-old girls. " The appeals court panels affirmed these convictions. "We do not believe that in enacting the crim ;11 sexual conduct statute the legislature intended to repeal or modify the felony murder statute," the appeals court said. "IF THE legislature had wished to modify the felony murder statute so as to provide that a charge should describe the offense of criminal sexual conduct rather than rape, it would have been a simple matter to so provide in the statute." The appeals court also rejected Mc- Donald's contention that the current legal frame violates equal protection standards because only males can be convicted of felony murder - or first degree murder - in a rape case. Only males can rape; thecourt said, and the legislature's decision that rape is more dangerous to human life than other forms of sexual assault is sound. Marx Brothers Double Trouble Feature ANIMAL CRACKERS (atl:oo) With the Famous Marx Men. Prime Cut-ups and Cut-downs by Movies' Master Anarchists "One horse laugh is worth 10,000 syllogisms" directed by Victor Herman. DUCK SOUP (at9:05) The Marx Brothers who made surrealism manifest in the reel world present Rufus T. Firefly and his cohorts in the rise and fall of Freedonia. Directed by Leo McCarey. Sun.: HESTER STREET * CINEMA GUILD IS SEEKING NEW MEMBERS Inquire at ticket desk for applications * CINEMA GUILD both shows-2.50 OLD ARCH. Ceach show-Si .50 AUD. English Subtitles The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at MLB 3 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 (Woody Allen, 1971) BANANAS 7& 10:20 Allen's humor at its height. A thoroughly alienated tester of Rube Goldberg gadgets takes off for a South American country where he is transformed into a revolutionary with a false beard. LOUISE LASSER in her best non-Mary Hart- man role. "An indecently funny comedy."-Vincent Conby. WHAT'S UP TIGER LILY?