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. 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