The Michigan Daily-Thursday; May 8, 1980-Page 17 Council OKs energy conmittee BY ELAINE RIDEOUT The first phase of the city's energy plan was put into motion April 21 as City Council unanimously approved Mayor Louis Belcher's recommended appointments to the Energy Steering Committee. According to Community Develop- ment Planner Larry Friedman, the committee will attempt to devise a comprehensive city energy plan by April, 1981. "This is just a rough draft," he said of the energy plan proposed to council last January. That plan ad- vocated conservation measures such as car pools, solar power, hydro-electric power, and waste recovery. THE STEERING committee will oversee the work of several task forces, according to Friedman, each of which will study an area in which the city might save energy. The areas under scrutiny include land use, renewable energy resources, transportation, city government operations, and housing. Although complete organizational details have yet to he 'worked out, Friedman said he expects the task for- ces to be comprised of existing groups with expertise in certain areas and citizen committees. "The task forces are envisioned to draw members from the community," he said. "They will bring back recom- mendations to the steering committee who in turn will clarify an energy plan or call for further study." COUNCIL HAS already pumped $17,000 into the energy plan. However, federal funds have now become available to cities like Ann Arbor with energy conservation programs. Fried- man said "five or-six" state and federal grants will come into play for the city. The Energy Steering Committee will hold its first meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in council chambers to discuss a course of action. Available for study will be a Michigan Energy Ad- ministration survey which examined the attitudes and awareness of Ann Ar- borites on energy usage issues. According to City Administrator Terry Sprenkel, Belcher attempted to get a good cross section of the com- munity in selecting committee mem- bers. Volunteers include professional people with backgrounds in banking, engineering, economics, energy, city government, as well as University representatives and members of at least two lobbying groups. "We tried to draw on a number of considerations in- cluding awareness, concern, and in- volvement in energy issues," Sprenkel said yesterday. - Pope John Paul, on A rican tour, restates birth control ban NAIROBI, Kenya (AP)-Pope John a leading Anglican canon said in a let- Paul II yesterday firmly restated the ter to a local newspaper that he hoped Roman Catholic Church's ban on con- the pope would not talk about con- traception, a move likely to stir con- traception on his trip here. troversy in this East African country "IS IT TOO MUCH to hope," wrote where efforts are being made to limit a Canon Kenneth E. Stovold, "that his sharply growing population. associates here will ask him (the pope) His affirmation of the church's stand _o refrain from reference to birth con- on birth control, abortion, divorce, and trot. sterilization came in a speech to the Catholic bishops of Kenya, which has an annual population growth rate of 4 per cent, one of the highest in the world. In 1978, the population was 15 million. "YOU HAVE CLEARLY insisted ... on the most fundamental human right, the right to life from the moment of conception. You have effectively reiterated the church's position on abortion, sterilization and contracep- tion," the pope told the 15 bishops. "Your faithful upholding of the chur- ch's teaching contained in the en- cyclical, Humanae Vitae, has been the expression of your pastoral concern and your profound attachment to the in- tegral values of the human person," he said. The encyclical, issued by the late Pople Paul IV, set down the church's opposition to artificial means of birth control. "THE GREAT AFRICAN tradition is faithful to so many family values, and to life itself, which takes its origins in the family," the pontiff said. In the midst of paralyzir Under tribal traditions, many non- _ -a startling, Crystal-Cle Catholic Africans, in fact place great tomorrow. Toffler docur value on large families as a sign of explosive new possibiliti status and wealth. But the pope's world around us: tomor statements may antagonize churchmen who have been working for population economy ...family sty control and may hurt the pope's efforts . . . media . . . the "eleCt at unifying Christian churches. Cottage" ... and the pc Rfr. t. -nnnt; nrriu :n :a: futur.n Tnffir talls how e (NEXT YEAR IN JERUSALEM) College Students... Recent Graduates Study Jewish Texts Live a Jewish Life MIDRESHET YERUSHALAYIM A co-educational one year program at NEVE SCHECHTER The Jerusalem campus of The Jewish Theological Seminary of America . For information plese write to Rabbi Ronala 0. Pa~ce The Jewish Theological Seminary of America 3080 Broadway. New York, N.Y. 10027 1 f