Po g e Two
t
i HE MICHIGAN DAILY
Wednesday, November 7, 19 lj
PageTwoIHE ICHGAN AIL
.Wed,.e.d_... Novembe... ,....r 7.. 91
I I
WOMEN'S CAREER OPPORTUITIES
SPONSORED BY
CA RE E R
Lunch Hour Discussions.
The third in a series of informal group sessions. Come hear representatives
from various employers and graduate/professional schools discuss their oppor-
tunities for women. All women welcome. Feed free to bring your lunch.
Wed., Nov. 7-12 noon
0 "BURGER KING CORPORATION
* UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO GRADUATE SCHOOL
Held in the International Center Recreation Room
COMING UP FRI., NOV. 9---Columbia Univ. Grad. School of Business; Vil-
lanova Univ. Law School; N.Y.U. Law School; Univ. of Penn. Wharton Gradu-
ate Division.
MEETING
Undergraduate
Political
Science
Association
Wednesday
Nov. 7-8 p.m.
6602 Haven Hall
NEW MEMBERS
WELCOME
US. f
WASHINGTON I)-The United
States is preparing for "wartime"
fuel controls, because of some-
body else's war.
The Arab nations' effort to
separate arch-enemy Israel from
her friends by cutting off their oil
now threatens to leave the United
States short of 14 to 20 per cent
of its petroleum needs within a
few months, government officials
warn.
The loss may force the govern-
ment to ration fuels, to order
businesses to close early, and
curtail pleasure driving. Oil com-
panies also may be ordered to in-
iel situation
worsens
(I
;:
i
crease production, and power
plants told to convert from oil to
coal. Clean-air programs may be
temporarily scrapped to permit
burning of dirtier fuels.
SUCH MEASURES already
have been proposed by Sen.
Henry Jackson (D-Wash.), Paral-
lel proposals are in preparation
by the Nixon administration.
As late as mid-October, when
the United States had only its
own petroleum bottlenecks to
worry about, the administration
was clinging to voluntary fuel-
saving as a reasonable hope for
getting through the winter.
Planning
Placement'
764-7460
"It's an entirely different situa-
tion now," says Duke Ligon, di-
rector of the Interior Depart-
ment's Office of Oil and Gas.
"The level of severity may cer-
tainly be increased.
"BEFORE," he said, "we were
talking about distributing any
fuels that might be available
over and above last year's levels.
"Now, we're talking about hav-
ing to cut back on fuel consump-
tion underneath the 1972 levels."
Before the Arab oil cut-off,
Ligon and other experts predicted
the nation would fall short of its
home heating oil needs by at
least 100,000 barrels a day, or
possibly as much as 800,000 bar-
rels a day depending on cold
weather, refinery breakdowns
and other factors.
THE ARAB cut-off, however,
drawfs the original shortage esti-
mate, threatening the United
States with loss of some 2 million
to 2.5 million barrels of petroleum
each day.
By mid-November, Ligon said,
the effects will begin being felt.
The shortage already has hit
Europe. Belgium and the Nether-
lands have banned Sunday driv-
ing to counter reduction of Arab
petroleum. Other countries are
contemplating similar measures.
Europe's shortage is indirectly
hitting the United States through
RELIABLE
ABORTION SERVICE
the f ael requirements of its 6th
Fleet in the Mediterranean.
TANKERS of U.S. petroleum
have sailed from Norfolk, Va., to
replace fuel no longer available
to the fleet from Italian refin-
eries.
The administration announced
last week that the Pentagon,
which normally buys about half
of its petroleum abroad, has been
given first priority to purchase
U.S. domestic petroleum, break-
ing civilian supply contracts if
necessary.
Interior Secretary Rogers Mor-
ton says if things get bad enough
for U.S. friends abroad, this na-
tion may have to "share their
sh'ortage," presumably by fore-
going some available foreign oil
so others can import it.
IT ALL ADDS up to this: A
predicted shortage of 100,000 to
800,000 barrels a day; a military
claim on domestic oil up to some
340,000 a day; the expected loss
of 2 million to 2.5 million barrels
of Arab oil; and the futher loss
of an unknown amount of foreign
oil to aid Europe and Japan.
The total possible shortage is
between 2.4 and 3.6 million bar-
rels, of the daily U.S. consump-
tion of about 17 million barrels, a
loss of 14 to 21 per cent or more.
Morton said last week manda-
tory allocation probably will have
to be extended to crude oil, gaso-
line and other petroleum pro-
ducts.
A
.CO
t
C' )
hg George's
SUPERMARKET OF
APPLIANCES "TV
STEREO-&CAMERAS
Home Appliance Mart,
C
EDIB
fI
ER'
favorite r
start you
usic
r own t '-w
Librar-
I'
"I DON'T SEE how we can not
prelancie rMina--ted2byweek have some sort of program that
censed obstetrician oynecolo- coeste nirbael"h
gist. Quick services will be or- said.
ranged. Low rates. Congress is already processing
(216) 281-6060 legislation to require complete
allocation.
CALL COLLECT For the immediate future, of-
24 HOUR SERVICE ficials say,mthe onlyerecourse is
to cut consumption.
Thursday*Friday-Saturday
Nov8-9-10
TURRENTINE
.Nov 1516 CH ICO HAMILTON.
Nov 17 CJQ
O
2333 E. STADIUM BLVD.
below the Frontier Restaurant
(near Washtenaw) Ann Arbor
AMPLE FREE PARKING
Call 663-9165 for information
A Musical (asis
0
.. U : ti
^
l
l .
';
...
y 3d '
f
Y
i t
a
is
I
IL
all this for only
$4
195
AsSoLUTELY
o
Making This The Greatest
Value We Ever Had
This 10-speed racing bicycle
is yours FREE with your order.
27" frame, caliper brakes and
safety lever, 10-speed Derailleur.
START RECORDING IMMEDIATELY...
HERE'S WHAT YOU GET...
Electrophonic 100 Watt (PP) amplifierwith AM, FM, FM-
Stereo Radio, 8-Track stereo tape Play/Record component,
Garrard Record Changer component, 8-Speaker Air Suspen-
sion audio system in rich walnut grain cabinets.
PLUS SPECIAL BONUS OFFER: in addition to-the
5 blank recording tapes, you get one stereo LP album, one
pre-recorded tape, stereo headphones and two microphones
with stands.
Liectronkne
:.
e : ,w
rr nurr..rryi
aM15 tr
y \ ' r /
I
i
,_ .
M ,.^ fem.
..- ''
j,'n " °
, ,'«!
"
+
f 3 ,'
y I
i
t
UNIVER\SITY PLAYERS PPrES ENTTS
ThE STRO030
BY (ARL STE'NH EM
h
r
r
A
1
I ..