The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, August 7, 1979-Page 3 Shuttle s decker service to end By ADRIENNE LYONS Although ridership has exceeded ex- pectations, Liberty Shuttledecker service will be discontinued next weelp because-of financial difficulties, an agent of the bus company said yester- day. JAN VAN HULL, an agent at Liberty Unlimited, Inc., said the red doubledecker buses will be discon- tinued from their circulator routes af- ter Aug. 11 because the company is unable to pay its bank loan. The buses are currently operating on revenues from advertising, Van Hull said. Because of these revenues, Liber- ty Unlimited is "close to breaking even, but still can't retire its debt," she ad- ded. The buses were brought to Ann Arbor last July for a one-year trial. Originally See SHUTTLEDECKER, Page 10 City Council vetoes funds for buildin access study By JOHN GOYER City -Council last night failed to approve funding for a study of the ac- cessibility of Ann Arbor buildings to the handicapped after a Council member clamed that under recent inter- pretations of the Headlee amendment, the state should fund the study. Council member Louis Senunas (R- Third Ward) said that a ruling by the state attorney general requires the state to fund acts that cities are required to undertake by state law, because the amendment limits cities' abilities to raise property taxes to pay for those acts. SENUNAS SAID he thought since the state required an accessibility study, the state should fund it. But a spokesperson for the Center for In- dependent Living, which would have conducted the study with $7,500 of city funds, said she thought Senunas had misunderstood the law. See COUNCIL, Page I1 U"11y Mato y UMA KmUSNE LIBERTY SHUTTLEDECKER driver Gene Greer soon will be out of a job when the busline discontinues service after Aug. 11. A bus official attributed the loss of service to a lack of funds. Fire fighters rely on inter-department cooperation By TIM YAGLE "On a fast When Ann Arbor fire fighters arrived Gallup-Silkw at the Gallup-Silkworth storage yard on determines1 State St. June 26, the huge blaze there cements," S - resulting from gas tank explosions - the dispatche obviously required the use of more than two host equipment and manpower than the Ann SCHMID S Arbor Fire Department had at its initially tries disposal. Eventually, more than 100 the fire. firefighters from seven departments from surrounding areas responded to the fire. The inter-department cooperation 'Our n that was so vital in containing the blaze any call was possible under a long-standing agreement among the state's fire new soul departments, according to Lt. Myron Franks of the Fire Marshall's office in Lansing. "IT'S A mutual aid agreement," Franks said. "They (fire departments) According help each other. It's a common practice A throughout the country." recognized According to Ann Arbor Fire Chief needed, the1 Frederick Schmid, the deputy chief deprtment' arrives at the scene with his fire the determir fighters and quickly examines the "Yo hav situation. "You hav trying to d The class of '76 and the job marketd Almost three-quarters of the Americans who graduated from college in 1976 have full-time jobs now, according to a survey conducted for the National Center for Education Statistics. The study said 73 per cent of the Class of 1976 have jobs, with average yearly earnings of $9,500. The field em- ploying the most bicentennial graduates is also the, field that pays the most-engineering. Ninty-three per cent of '76 engin graduates have jobs that average $13,200 per year. Only 61 per cent of -humanities or fine arts graduates found work, and they get a median $8,200 per year. Health services found places for 90 per cent of graduates sporting related majors. No surprises in the survey-it's the -moving fire like that (the orth fire) the deputy chief when to call for reinfor- chmid said. "He advises er to call the chief if more es are laid." AID the deputy chief also to predict the duration of request the most suitable type of equipment." SCHMID DEFINED a first alarm as "the number and type of equipment dispatched to a certain address." Each successive alarm is "a call for the same number of trucks and equipment. Alarms," Schmid said, "are the num- ber of times the officer in charge ain goal for fighting fires in Ann Arbor is to get to in the city in three and a half minutes and with our thside fire station, we should be able to do that.' -Ann Arbor Fire Chief Frederick Schmid bor was the closest station with the specific type of equipment needed, the Upper Peninsula city's fire department would contact the state fire marshal, who would in turn tell the Ann Arbor fire department to help the Marquette, department. Failure to heed that order is a misdemeanor, Franks said. ACCORDING TO Franks, the state would cover the cost in this situation, but for intra-county calls, each depar- tment covers-the cost of ita service. But Schmid stressed "no money ac- tually changes hands." Schmid said the main goal for fighting fires in Ann Arbor is to "get to any call in the city in three-and-a-half minutes (it currently takes around five minutes) and with the new Southside fire station, we should be able to do that." Schmid cited a 1972 British study which showed how rapidly a fire started in a kitchen wastebasket, spreads through an average two-story house and estimated the cost damage estimate at each level. See FIRE, Page 11 to Schmid, when it is that more alarms are type of equipment, not the s proximity to the fire, is ing factor in which depar- t. e to determine what you're do," Schmid said. "You (either the deputy chief or the chief) requests assistance." According to Schmid, there is a ver- bal agreement between state fire departments that states, "if so-and-so needs help, you help them. So, theoretically, if there was a raging fire in Marquette, and Ann Ar- same melody that was in last year's song. Change of heart Daniel Ward and Bruce All ran into thieves with kind hearts Saturday night. The two were driving down a lonely Antrim County road near Mancelona Saturday night when their car broke down. They decided to sleep in the car and go for help in the morning. But they were awakened around 4:30 a.m. by three men driving a blue van. The men stabbed Ward and ran off wit: $13, sleeping bags, and a radio. All tried to flagdown passing cars, to no avail. All then noticed the blue van returning, jumped back in the car, and locked the doors. The van stop- ped and the man who stabbed Ward got out. "He said he'd never stabbed a ylody before and he felt kind of bad about it," Ward said later. "He also wanted to see where I'd been stabbed." The thieves returned the sleeping bags and the radio, but kept the cash. Then they helped Ward and All start their broken down car. "We just drove off then. I don't know what they did," Ward said. Happenings ... .- are scarce today. Dr. Ezziddin Ibrahim, cultural advised, United Arab Emirates, will discuss "Islamic Movements Today" at 1 p.m. in Lecture Room 1, MLB ... FILMS: Ann Arbor Film Co-op-The Daughter of Dr. Jekyll, 7 p.m.; The Honeymoon Killer, 8;30 p.n.; both in Aud. A, Angell Hall. On the outside Today will be partly sunny, with a high tem- perature near 85'. Expect a thundershower or two during the afternoon. The low will hit 60. 2 a a r _.....: