Page 8-Tuesday, June 10, 1980-The Michigan Daily TO DECIDE WHETHER DISCRIMINATES AGAINST MALES High Court to judge rape law From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court agreed yesterday to judge the constitutionality of statutory rape laws. The justices said they will decide whether California's statutory rape law, similar to those inmost states, im- permissibly discriminates against males. THE LAW makes it a crime - punishable by up to eight years in prison - for a man or boy to have sexual intercourse with a consenting female not yet 18 and not his wife. Females cannot commit a crime under the law. The justices were told that the law is based on "remnants of the exploded myth of intrinsic male superiority." "The statute blames the male even though the female, may be older, more mature, or herself the sexual aggressor," said lawyers for a young Sonoma County, Calif., man facing statutory rape charges. IN OTHER action yesterday, the nation's . highest court ruled unanimously in another California case that states are free to give residents the right to demonstrate peacefully or cir- culate petitions in a privately owned shopping center. The owner of the Pruneyard Shopping Center in Santa Clara, Calif. brought the free speech case to the high court. He appealed the protections the state Supreme Court ordered for the reasonable exercise of speech and petitioning in privately owned shopping centers. The owner said efforts by some high school students to gather signatures protesting a U.N. resolution on Zionism violated his property rights, which have federal constitutional protection. IN AFFIRMING the California ruling, Justice William Rehnquist took note of a Supreme Court ruling in 1972 that the First Amendment does not prevent a private shopping center from barring distribution of certain han- dbills. However, he said for the court, that ruling does not "limit the authority of the state to exercise its police power or its sovereign right to adopt in its own Constitution individual liberties more expansive than those conferred by the federal Constitution." The high court rejected the owners' argument that the students' activity amounted to an unconstitutional taking of property without compensation. THE COURT, expected to wind up its 1979-80 term around the end of the mon- th, also made it more difficult for con- sumers to get product information from the government by ruling unanimously that the federal Consumer Product Safety Commission cannot release in- dustry-supplied information before deciding whether it's accurate and that public disclosure is fair. The decision blocked release of secret safety reports on television sets. The court also agreed to decide the scope of mentally retarded persons' "right to treatment." Council OKs study* on bad intersections By ELAINE RIDEOUT City Council gave its unanimous approval to a three-party agreement between the Ann Arbor Transportation Authority (AATA), the city of Ann Ar- bor, and the Michigan Department of Transportation that would put into motion a Fuller-Geddes preliminary engineering study at last night's special session. The study, already approved by AATA, would examine engineering WHAT A COMBI NATION feasibility for a three-part plan presen- ted to council at last week's regular session by city engineer Leigh Chizek. The project provides alternatives for three problem areas, namely the Huron-Glen intersection, the Broad- way-Wall intersection, and the Fuller roadway that currently bisects Fuller Park. AMONG THE alternatives con- sidered by the Urban Area Transpor- tation Study Committee (UTAS) upon completion of a Huron Valley corridor study are: " widening Glen into four lines; * making Glen one-way southbound; " construction of a new intersection at Huron and Washtenaw Place; " making some of the streets leading into the Broadway-Wall intersection one-way; " replacing or constructing a new Wall Street bridge in another location; and " creating a new roadway either ad- jacent to the present road or across Fuller Park toward the University Medical Center. COUNCIL ALSO heard a review on - the status of the installation of the siren warning system presented by City Ad- ministrator Terry Sprenkle. Sprenkle said there are a total of 19 sirens currently mounted on poles in the city. Of these, he said, nine are operational, six are awaiting connec- tion by the electric company, and four are in the process of being wired by the city Radio Shop. He promised council that by June 30, all 22 units will be in operation, adding that an additional five units, fundable under the current 1980-81 budget, will be put into operation as soon as possible. Sprenkle also notified council that the procedures for the activation of the siren warning system have been modified to be activated upon the sighting of a funnel cloud within the limits of Washtenaw County. "They (the sirens) will no longer be based on arbitrary limits of miles," Sprenkle said, "and will be in operation during daylighthours and at night." PRIME RIB AND CRAB What a blend of tastes? You get our tender prime rib, cooked to your order, served along side a generous portion of succulent Alaskan king crab leg. And$ of course it includes a fresh green salad, bread & butter and your choice of baked potato, French fries or rice. And at a very special $8.95. COMPLETE DINNER KEUNTAIN Bef efo 300 South Maple Ann Arbor, 665-1133 This is our regular Prime Rib and Alaskan King Crab dinner-at a special saving price all day on Sunday and Monday thru Thursday during our regular dinner hours. Call today for reservations. Continental Restaurant Systems 1980 Subscribe to The Daily- Call 764-0558 0 ... ... .......,_......, ._ ... .......... ... ..i