The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, May 2, 1979-Page 3 Utilities rate cut idea aired n Council By JOHN GOYER and ELISA ISAACSON In an effort to distribute the financial burden of local sewage treatment im- provements, City Administrator Sylvester Murray proposed to City Council Monday night a sewage sur- charge on new building developments as an alternative to the city-wide 23 per cent rate hike now in the proposed 1979- 80 city budget. The proposed increase would cover the costs of hauling excess sludge and costs related to the expansion of the sewage treatment plant. The plant is Hangin arnd Doily Photo by MAUREEN OMALLEY currently being expanded in order to accommodate waste from new Former University pole vault champ Jim Stokes practiced near the Track and Tennis Building yesterday, on the first sunny developments and outlying townships. day in over a week. See COUNCIL, Page 7 CONSERVATIVES REMAIN CONFIDENT: Callaghan edges Thatcher in poll From AP and Rester said, and said she did not believe it London Stock Exchange, where the of Commons, responded to the news LONDON - Britain's election cam- would stop her becoming Britain's first value of shares fell by $2 billion, confidently. paign neared conclusion yesterday with woman prime minister after THE UNEXPECTED poll gave a "Lose the election? Such a thing is the latest of the conflicting opinion polls tomorrow's vote. boost to Callaghan, who entered the totally inconceivable," he said at a putting Prime Minister James ALL PREVIOUS opinion polls have campaign trailing badly after his news conference. "The polls are begin- Callaghan's Labor Party-in the lead for put the Conservatives ahead with a lead minority government collapsed after ning to catch up with what I've always the first time, averaging 7.7 per cent. failing to win a vote of confidence on said." Conservative leader Margaret That- Thatcher is campaigning on a March 28. cher brushed aside the survey in the manifesto more right-wing in content The lead was inconclusive, con- CALLAGHAN, 67, fighting what is Daily Mail newspaper showing than that of any post-war Conservative sidering the margin for error in a almost certainly his last election as Callaghan ahead by just 0.7 per cent. leader. polling sample, but Callaghan, fighting leader of the Labor Party, hopes to "I'm not in the least worried," she But the opinion poll in the Daily Mail an uphill battle in his bid to win a retain office despite the damage inflic- t i- a Conservative paper - affected the majority of seats in the 635-seat House ted to his prestige by a winter of strikes. r-toaay It doesn't look like summer, but. . . Wecome back to the die-hards who are staying in town for the summer. What you're holding is the Daily's first edition of Spring term. The Daily will also publish during Summer term. Subscriptions can be had for a mere $6.50 for the whole summer. Call 764-0558 or drop by the Daily offices at 420 Maynard between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. to order your subscription. Summer bus schedule University buses started running on a new sum- mer schedule last Sunday. Monday through Friday, Northwood buses will run every 12 minutes between 7a.m. and 5:30 p.m.; every 18 minutes between 5:30 p.m. and 10:30 p.m.; and every 30 minutes between 10:30 p.m. and 12:30 a.m. On Fridays, the buses will run until 1 a.m. On Saturdays, buses will run at 20- minute intervals between 7:10 a.m. and 8:50 p.m.: and at 40-minute intervals betweeen 8:50 p.m. and 1:30 a.m. On Sundays, buses will run every 40 minutes between 7:30 a.m. and 12:15 Monday mor- ning. University buses will not run the Bursley- Baits route during the summer. Commuter bus. schedules will remain the same. Free Ernie who? Signs posted around the University Hospital, on .State Street, and at the Juvenile Court Building demand that the public "Free Ernie." Ernie who, you may ask. Is Ernie a political prisoner? Is he a dissident from a South American country? Or are the posters simply advertising the availability of a new product monickered "Ernie?" Wrong, wrong, and wrong. Ernie Bickland is a nine-year-old foster child, an inpatient at the University Children's Psychiatric Hospital. Ernie's former foster paren- ts, Richard and Jill Hall of South Lyon, claim Er- nie's tenure at the hospital for nine months is "illegal". Ernie has been in the custody of the Washtenaw County Friend of the Court since 1973, when his natural parents divorced. The Halls are trying to find out why the Friend of the Court took custody of Ernie after he spent five years in their care, and apparently they decided a poster cam- paign wuld bolster their efforts. Correction I In the Daily's article on executive committees which appeared in the April 15 issue, it was in- correctly reported that only two colleges at the University currently have students serving on their executive committees. In fact, the School of Education has three students serving in a non- voting capacity on the college's executive commit- tee. Unlike the executive committees on the College of Architecture and Urban Planning and the School of Public Health however, students in the School of Education are barred from Executive Committee meetings when personnel matters-promotions, tenure considerations-are discussed and decided. Carol Luckhardt, a senior in the School of Education and a member of the executive committee, said even though student input is important she would like to see the University move to allow students on executive committees 'to vote on all matters. "I'd like to see more power for students," said Luckhar- dt. Correction II An article in the last Daly erroneously reported that on April 20 the University's Regents passed a resolution calling for a "socially responsible prac- tices" committee to be comprised of four minority students, two staff members, two faculty, one Regent, and one administrator. The resolution passed actually referred the matter back to the University's vice-presidents to consider the feasability of such a committee. happenings ... ... are spairSO today. Sleep in until 2 p.m., when Larry Coryell of the One Truth Band will be at School Kid's Records, autographing album covers . . .catch Coryell and the rest of the One Truth Band featuring John McGaughlin at Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m., presented by Eclipse Jazz.. . a Science Fiction Seminar Abroad is being offered through the Eastern Michigan University (EMU) English department. Graduate and undergraduate credit is awarded for study during August at University College in London, England, and at the University of Sussex in Brighton, England. For more information, call Dr. Marshal Tymn of EMU's English department at 487-0155. On the outside Today will be mostly cloudy, with a chance of showers. The high will be close to 55', while the low will dip near freezing. Don't store away those down jackets yet.