Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, April 3, 1975 r !y I.r U I MORTON REPORTS Energy use drops a PLO's Arafat sees return of Kissinger's shuttle diplomacy I . . ,. I I : I" "" -A-L-.L r ; M-4 I P i; "- ar x 1 i.;a !i. r v r.:; ,:": 5 'r' ' . B m 11 OFFICE HOURS CIRCULATION -764-0558 COMPLAINTS AND SUBSCRIPTIONS 10 a.m.-4 p.m. CLASSIFIED ADS - 764-0557 10 a.m.-4 p.m. DEADLINE FOR NEXT DAY-12:00 p.m. DISPLAY ADS - 764-0554 MONDAY thru FRIDAY-12 p.m.-4 p.m. Deadline for Sunday issue- WEDNESDAY ot 5 p.m. DEADLINE 3 days in advance by 3 p.m. Thursday at 3 p.m. for Tuesday's paper WASHINGTON (Reuter) - Americans used 2.2 per cent less energy in 1974 than in 1973, registering the first drop in con- sumption in more than two decades, the InteriortDepart- ment reported yesterday. Interior Secretary R o g e r s Morton said "I am delighted- and frankly gratified-at this drop." HE SAID decreased consump- tion was due to five factors- the oil embargo, higher prices, the economic slowdown, suc- cessful conservation efforts and a relatively mild winter. Morton, noting the decrease was the first since 1952 and that energy use had increased between 1960 and 1973 at an annual rate of 4.1 per cent, said he hoped this was the start of a trend. efforts to meet energy short- ages by increasing domestic energy production could be ef- fectively supplemented by meas- ures aimed at decreasing con- sumption." FIGURES compiled by the de- partment's Bureau of Mines showed that consumption of energy declined last year from all sources, except nuclear power and hydropower. Nuclear power consumption increased by 32.1 per cent and hydropower by 1.8 per cent. Petroleum use fell by 3.7 per cent in 1974, bituminous coal by 2.9 per cent and natural gas by 2.1 per cent, the Bureau said. Energy consumption dropped in all use-sectors, the figures showed, with transportation reg- istering the biggest drop-3.4 per cent. Within that sector, jet fuel use was down by 5.9 per cent and gasoline by 2.1 per cent. By The Associated Press Guerrilla leader Yasir Arafat predicted yesterday that Secre- tary of State Henry Kissinger will make another try at shuttle diplomacy in the Middle East. He did not say when. His forecast came as the U.S. ambassadors to Egypt, Israel, Syria 'and Jordan were sum- moned to Washington to help in the State Department's re- assessment of American policy in the Middle East. IT ALSO coincided with Israel insisting it would not sit down with Arafat's Palestine Libera- tion Organization (PLO) and as Egypt announced it asked Wash- ington and Moscow to begin preparations for reconvening the Geneva peace conference. "I prefer not to say that Kissinger has failed but only that he suspended his mission and will repeat his attempt be- cause he has the aim of open- ing loopholes in the A r a b stance," Arafat told a news ccn- ference in Kuwait. Arafat was in Kuwait on what Palestinian sources said was a I to'ir of Persian Gulf countries following the breakdown in Kissinger's mediation between Israel and Egypt. HIS REFERENCE to "loop- holes" in the Arab stance re- flected Palestinian and Syrian concern during the Kissinger talks that President Anwar Sa- dat oftEgypt might have settled for partial withdrawal in Sinai; without insisting on Syrian and Palestinian claims. Arafat c l a i m e d American thinking is attaching more im- portance to establishment of a Palestinian national authority or government-in-exile. He said he gathered this impression from a recent talk in Beirut with Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.). McGovern, head of a Senate subcommittee on the Middle East, is winding up a tour of the region. During his travels he met Arafat and Syrian Pres- ident Hafez Assad. Following b o t h conversations, he told newsmen it was time for the U.S. to consider recognizing the PLO. 4 I !t. -. ' y; i.. iif i I McGOVERN stopped short of recommending recognition, but Arafat said the senator's re- marks nevertheless marked the first time he heard such Ideas from a high-ranking American politician. McGovern's comments hit the Arab world at a particalarly favorable time, coming as the Ford administration announced a major reassessment of its Middle East policy. The reassessment has excited wide interest in Arab press and diplomatic circles, with observ- ers intensely curious to see whether the outcome will be new pressure on Israel for con- cessions toward a peace agree- ment. 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Charter Amendment "A" can hurt the people it is supposed to help. It can hurt renters. That'swhy so many renters will "X" the "No" box on Amendment "A" when they vote on April 7. How can "A" hurt renters? Well, just like rent control has hurt renters in Cambridge, Mass. and in Boston and in any other town where it has been tried. 1+c+ i~ nn nr rar~rrn &-e 1. Some building owners turned their buildings into condominiums. Renters had to buy their apartments. Or they had to move. 2. Some building owners weren't able to keep up with taxes and other expenses. In time their buildings became "run down" and unrentable and then the buildings were simply abandoned. 3. Banks stopped lending money for the construction of new apartment buildings. Thus, rent control created a shortage of apartments. And, as you might expect, the pressure created problems where renters were pitted against renters, and owners were pitted against the control boards. And the cities found themselves with costly new administrative problems that loomed larger and larger each year. "A" isn't the right answer for Ann Arbor renters. It can hurt more than it can help. That's why you should vote "No". It subtracTed apartm the market. nI m Irom l Vote "No" on "A" on April 7. "A" hasa sneaky Am g A" may get you ... missing out on some of the DAILIES because ,, of delivery mistakes? ;, ; a.= OR... disagree with a bill we sent you for THE DAILY? WE'D LIKE TO TRY TO STRAIGHT- EN OUT THAT PROBLEM, BUT WE CAN'T IF YOU DON'T LET US KNOW ABOUT IT. I I i