Page 6-B-Friday, September 7,1979-The Michigan Daily Heating oil shc WASHINGTON (AP) - People who beat with oil shod be able to get all the fuel they need this winter but will pay at least 50 per cent more than they did a year ago, the Carter administration said Wednesday. "There may be many people in our country who will be faced this winter -with a cruel choice between food or heat," departing Deputy Energy Secretary John O'Leary told a congressional panel. O'LEARY AND ether administration officials testified at a hearing into the status of U.S. heating oil supplies. The session was held jointly by two House energy subcommittees. The officials denied that the sale of two million barrels of kerosene and heating oil to Iran would noticeably af- feet U.S. supplies of these fuels or that the transaction constituted "black- mail." And they disputed news reports in- dicating that Iran planned to re-sell the fuel at a profit. "Iran will use every drop of that oil," State Department official Henry Precht asserted. PRECHT SAID reports to the con- trary seemed aimed at home consum- ption in Iran and do not reflect the reality of the situation. O'Leary reiterated administration claims that the fuel exported to Iran equalled only about three days worth of crude oil imports from that nation, now estimated at roughly 750,000 barrels a day. ould be plentiful "This was not blackmail.. . It was However, O'Leary also testified tha part of the cement of rebuilding good the price outlook is bleak. "It is clea relationships with this country (Iran) that there has been a significant in that will be so important to us in the crease in heating oil prices over las future," O'Leary said, winter's level," he said. EARLIER FEARS of a heating oil O'Leary said the national averag shortage this winter have been all but has already climbed to 80 cents pe eliminated, said O'Leary, 'whose gallon, a 27-cent increase - or 51 pe resignation as the nation's No. 2 energy cent rise - over the December 197 official takes effect later this month. price. "Industry is building stocks at a O'LEARY'S TESTIMONY coincide faster rate than last year," and with the release of a new Libraryo President Carter's goal of having 240 Congress study which compared th million barrels of heating oil and diesel current 80-cent-per gallon price wit fuel in reserve by October will be met, last September's average price of 4 he predicted. cents a gallon. O'Leary said that will take care of Of that total one-year increase, onl even a severe winter. 14.8 cents can be attributed to highe WHILE THERE may be some spot crude oil costs, the report alleged. shortages that will be handled on a Thus, the industry has charged col "case by case" basis, there should be sumers some $1 billion more in highe no major shortages this winter like the prices than can be justified by highe shortages of gasoline earlier in the crude costs and general inflation, th summer, he said. report concluded. t r n- st e er 78 d of e h 49 y er- n- er er he is preserved on 36mmU4ROMFU The Michigan Daily 420 Maynard Street AND Graduate Library BUT O'LEARY said that despite the sharp price increase, there is no hard evidence that oil companies are engaging in price-gouging - even though he said refinery profit "margins" do seem to be increasing. He said the administration will shor- tly ask Congress for an additional $150 million over the $250 million already appropriated for energy assistance for low-income families. O'Leary also said there should be enough diesel fuel supplies to go around to keep farmers, truckers and homeowners happy - but that none of these groups will receive special con- sideration. In another development, Carter's long-range energy proposal for $88 million in federal subsidies for syn- thetic fuel development came under at- tack before a Senate panel. Private consultants said that Congress should avoid establishing a crash program to develop a domestic synthetic fuels industry. Pillow Talk Daily Photo by JIM KRUZ. of the South Quad Welcoming Committee assists a recent arrival at A member4 the dorm. _- -- \- Open 7 Days COURSE P1 Quality Copies-Low FREE Copy of you course pack to profe Dollar Bill C 611 Churc ' block South of S.L _ 665-9200 f<11 Prices ur ssors )pying ch University ,,, 'U' Law Prof. likely AppelateCourt j'urist By TOM MIRGA significance. University Law School Professor Last March, Edwards was one of nine and labor law and arbitration specialist finalists recommended by a judicial Harry Edwards has been selected for nominating commission for two vacan appointment to the U.S. Sixth Circuit cies on the appeals court bench, but wa Court of Appeals in Washington, the passed over at that time. Justice Department has indicated. IF HIS appointment is confirmed If the nomination by President Carter Edwards will fill a vacancy on the 11 is confirmed by the Senate, the 38-year- member court created by the recen old professor will become one of the decision of Chief Judge David Bazelor youngest jurists sitting on a U.S. ap- to assume senior status, or a semi peals court. Edwards' appointment is active role in court affairs. pending formal clearnace by the A member of the University's la Federal Bureau of Investigation and faculty since 1970, Edwards was electe the American Bar Association. chairman of the board of Amtrak i "I'M HIGHLY gratified to know I'm April. He had first been appointed b under serious consideration," he said, Carter as an Amtrak board member i "but given the posture of this situation, 197 I am in no position to make any further A 1962 graduate of Cornell Univer comments." sity, Edwards received his law degre The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals is from the University in 1965. He serve considered one of the most influential on the Michigan Law Review and was a courts in the nation, second in stature member of the Order of the Coif, a only to the U.S. Supreme Court. It deals national legal honor society. primarily with cases of national Before joining the University's la faculty, he spent fivc: years with a Chicago law firm and later served o the Harvard Law School faculty fro 1975-77. Edwards was also among a group o lawyers designated to serve on the American Bar Association's Com mission on Law' and the Economy which recently issued a widely-know report on "Federal Regulation: Road to Reform." Van driver to face trial in death of 'U' student By TIMOTHY YAGLE An Ypsilanti man, charged with th death of a University student in July, i scheduled to stand trial in Washtena County Circuit Court October 15 o charges of manslaughter. Mark McCleary, 25, is accusedo striking and killing 30-year-ol graduate ethnoarchaeology studer Jane Sallade on July 20 with his 19 Ford van. The southbound vehic] swerved off the road and struck Sallad as she was walking across the media on North University Ave. near Churc St. The impact threw Sallade nearly feet toward the University shuttle b stop. McCLEARY STOOD mute at a pr trail hearing August 29. According to Ann Arbor police, t van bounced between the sidewalk an --1 the street for nearly 60 feet before hi ting the Carbondale, Ill. native. Considered "an unusually brillian student by her colleagues and wide published, Sallade was preparing hi doctoral dissertation on land use pl terns in Cyprus, which University o ficials said would have been the fir paper of its kind published in the cou try. I _intriesI n'I r1 a t n> I Y? n- L 'I.. d a a w a in e is W n of d nt 76 le de an eh 80, us er he lit- t Ay Eer ©f- rst n- SJN(EREPORTS ON THE LATEST DEVELOPMENTS IN ALL THE SCIENCES. 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