Friday, May 13, 1977. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Friday, May 13, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Arabian oil fire under control BOB BAGERIS Presents AN EVENING WITH DHARAN, Saudi Arabia (AP) - A mysterious explosion and pipeline fire in the heart of the world's greatest :oil producing area was brought tinder control yesterday before it could crip- ple Saudi Arabia's oil produc- tionand export facilities, oil company officials said. Though contained, the fire was still reported burning yes- terday at the Abqaiq oil field in the desert about 35 miles from this oil center on the Persian Gulf. THE ARABIAN American Oil Co. (Aramco) which oper- ates the field and must Saudi oil production, said one em- ploye was killed and 13 others were hospitalized with burns and other injuries. A U.S. Em- bassy official said the dead man was a Saudi foreman and that no Americans were believed to be among the injured. The cause of the explosion was not immediately determ- ined. American diplomats in Saudi Arabia said the possibili- ty of sabotage was being in- vestigated, and a source on Capitol Hill in Washington said he understood Palestinian ter- rorists had set off the giant blaze with satchel explosives to protest the possibility of a ne- gotiated settlement between Is- rael and the Arabs. But Frank Jungers, the American president of Aram- co, said of the sabotage pos- sibility: "Absolutely not. It was a pipeline failure. It defi- nitely .was not that.' THIS DESERT KINGDOM is one of the most conservative regimes among Arab nations. The explosion and fire rup- tured a major pipeline and forc- ed the shutdown of the Abqaiq oil field, which produces about 800,000 barrels of oil a day. In Japan, which is heavily dependent on Saudi oil imports, news of the fire led to near- panic buying on the Tokyo fore- ign currency and stock ex- changes. BUT ARAMCO officials play- ed down the possible impact of the fire on the world oil mar- ket. Exports will decline tempor- arily, "but it's not a major les- sening of production," Jungers said in an interview with a re- porter who contacted him here by telephone from Washington. There were varying reports on how much of the Saudi oil production was affected. OIL INDUSTRY sources here and in Nicosia, Cyprus, said the affected pipeline has a capa- city of five million barrels daily, almost two-thirds of all Sandi production. But Jungers said there was "not that kind of loss at all." Aramco officials said they ex- pected to meet the company's monthly production schedule despite the fire.. The explosion occurred at a section of pipeline between two ptumping stations. Aramco of- ficials said. When the line rup- tured it sprayed oil over a near- by processing area, causing a fire to erupt and spread rapid- ly," according to an Aramco statement. JOAN BAEZ SPECIAL GUEST STAR DANNY O'KEEF Tickets $5.50-6.50-7.50 Reserved Avaolable at the Masonic Temple Box Office, All Hudsons & Wards A BAMBOO PRODUCTION A Io time ago in a galaxy farfar away... It's a spewing smoke- stack. It's litter in the streets. It's a river where fish can't live. You know what pollu- tion is. But not everyone does. So the next time you see pollution, don't close your eyes to it. Write a letter. Make a call. Point itoutto someone who can do something about it. People start pollution. People can stop it. KeepAmeica Beautiful tONPVU A11W#.AN1eYork, ,. Y. I WOs Thmes Advoirt CoNamepr T ENTIETH CENTURY-FCR Presents A LUCASFILM LTD PRODUCTION STAR WARS Sterrng MARK HAMILL HARPISON FORD CAPRIE FISHER PETER CUSHING and ALEC GUINNESS Written and Drected by GEORGE LUCAS Produced by GARY KURTZ msictby JOHN WILLIAMS .PG M.a F er"" PANAVISIN P5NTM BY DE W' 1ECHtNCaoJ Star Wars opens May 25th in these cities: NEW YORK -Astor Plaza PHOENIX -Cine Capri WASHINGTON -Uptown NEW YORK -Orpheum SAN DIEGO-Valley Circle TORONTO-Uptown I HICKSVILLE - Twin. MINNEAPOLIS -St. Louis Park 'CHICAGO -River Oaks I PARAMUS- RKO PHILADELPHIA- Eric's Place . *CHICAGO -Edens 2 MENLO PARK -Cinema PENNSAUKEN - Eric I 'CHICAGO -Yorktown 3 BOSTON-Charles LAWRENCEVILLE -Eric I *CHICAGO-Esquire CINCINNATI- Showcase Cin I CLAYMONT -Eric I *DALLAS -NorthPark 2 DAYTON -Dayton Mall I FAIRLESS HILLS -Eric II *HOUSTON -Galleria 2 DENVER -Cooper PITTSBURGH - Showcase *DES MOINES -Riverhill ROCK ISLAND (Milan)-Cinema 3 PORTLAND - Westgate I *INDIANAPOLIS -Eastwood DETROIT-Americana i SALT LAKE CITY -Centre *OMAHA -Cin. Center LOUISVILLE-Cinema l SAN FRANCISCO-Coronet *MONTREAL -Westmont Sq KANSAS CITY -Glenwood I SACRAMENTO -Century 25 *VANCOUVER - Stanley LOS ANGELES -Avco I SAN JOSE -Century 22A *ST. LOUIS-Creve Coeur GB. ORANGE-City Centre I SEATTLE--U.A. 15 'Opens May 27th