Page 10-Saturday, July 21, 1979-The Michigan Daily DNR says state air, water quality good LANSING (UPI)-The state Depart- ment of Natural Resources (DNR) said yesterday air and water quality is still good in most of the state, despite problems with several Lower Peninsula rivers and widespread violation of ozone standards. The conclusion was based on two reports-one dealing with water quality from Oct. 1, 1977 through September 1978 and a second coverning the air quality situation during calendar year 1978. The water report, written by John Hartig of the DNR staff, described water quality as good in most Upper Peninsula and northern Lower Penin- sula streams. Most southern Lower Peninsula streams were in the medium range. SOME OF THE streams with good water quality in northern Michigan in- cluded the Tahquamenon, AuSable, Presque Isle, Menominee, Mainistee, Betsie, Sturgeon, Muskeon, Pere Marquette, Boardman, Rifle and On- tonagon. Seven stream segments were designated poor quality because toxic materials concentrations in fish collec- ted from them exceed safe limits. Those stream segments are the south branch of the Shiawassee River, Por- tage Creek, Kalamazoo River, down- stream Chippewa River, Pine River downstream from St. Louis, Tit- tabawassee River downstream from Midland and the Saginaw River. Of the nearly 2,000 Michigan inland lakes greater than 50 acres, 973 have been classified according to produc- tivity-the amount of nutrients and living material present. Of those, 11 per cent had low levels, 53 per cent had in- termediate levels and 36 per cent were considered enriched. HARTIG SAID lakes naturally age and become more enriched with nutrients and living material. Enriched-eutrophic-waters are not necessarily the result of increased pollution, hesaid. Water quality in the Great Lakes generally is very good, with a few ex- ceptions-Green Bay, Thunder Bay, Saginaw Bay, Lake Eric and a portion of the western shore to Lake St. Clair. Hardig said water quality in the Detroit River has improved "dramatically since the 1960s." Michigan's air quality continues to meet federal health-related standards in most areas for five of the six pollutants monitored. Ozone continued to violate air quality standards throughout Michigan, as it has in most of the Midwest, but Michigan's air met federal standards for suspended particulates, sulfar dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, carbon monoxide and lead in most parts of the state. PRIVATE EYE PHILADELPHIA (AP)-An exhibi- tion, "The Private Eye," is on view at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts through Aug.26. The academy says the show "in- cludes 71 works of American art from the 18th through the 20th centuries on loan from 50 outstanding private collec- tions in the Philadelphia area." Philippines offers asylum for boat people GENEVA, Switzerland (AP)-In what a U.S. delegate called a "break- through" toward saving Indochina's "boat people," the Philippines offered yesterday to establish a transit camp for up to 50,000 refugees on its soil. Despite this and other new proposals, the opening of a two-day world con- ference on the Southeast Asian refugee crisis was far from harmonious. An angry Chinese delegate accused Viet- nam of committing "genocide" against its Chiense residents and forcing them to flee and risk their lives at sea. CHINESE DEPUTY Foreign Minister Zhang Wenjin urged the more than 50 nations attending the conferen- ce to cut off aid to Hanoi and spend the money instead on emergency relief effor- ts. The Vietnames delegation, mean- while, expressed a willingess to cooperate in "properly channeling and legalizing" the flow of refugees from Vietnam, which U.N. officials estimate total one million since 1975. But the Vietnames gave no sign they are ready to curb the exodus. Philippine Foreign Minister Carolos Romulo said the plight of the boat people has become a "wound on the conscience of our world." F45 FR I & SAT ONLY!I HE SAID HIS country was ready to establish the new processing center in an effort to take some of the pressure off Malaysia, Indonesia and the other "first-asylum" states that have borne the brunt of the refugee flood. "The Philippine government's decision is a breakthrough," said Rep. Hamilton Fish Jr. (R-N.Y.), a member of the U.S. delegation, "and we are going to try to build on it with the Malaysians and Indonesians." As U.N. officials had hoped, the opening of the conference produced other new pledges of financial assistan- ce and new offers of permanent homes for the Vietnamese, Cambodian and Laotian refugees. VICE-PRESIDENT Walter F. Mon- dale in an address today is expected to elaborate on President Carter's statements that he would instruct the U.S. Navy to use its ships and planes to help rescue boat people adrift in the South China Sea. The U.S. delegation also includes 11 other congressmen and Govs. Brendan Byrne of New Jersey and Robert D. Ray of Iowa. The conference was called by U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim to mobilize international assistance for the estimated 400,000 refugees, many of them ethnic Chinese, crammed into makeshift camps across Southeast Asia. Tabu is a Polynesian word which has the double meaning of sacred and cur- sed. All NEW' A11PIFfEE/T' IF YOU LIKED YOU'LL LOVE... PARTTWO SEE...JOHN BOY SMOKE A JOINT! SEE ... CAROL BURNETT PICK HER NOSE! SEE...THE FRANKENSTEIN MONSTER BREAK UP WITH LAUGHTER! King wants to organize minority students L SE I' FTE IAIOSOTTKS CESRE. CNEGOF ISAE m " STAR TREK " ABBOTT & COSTELLO * BETTE DAVIS * HOLLYWOOD PALACE " MASH . HUMPHREY BOGART * BOB HOPE " ELVIS PRESLEY " DRACULA " NAME THAT TUNE " ERROL FLYNN . EDW. G. ROBINSON " PERRY COMO " NEWLYWED GAME * LAUGH-IN . JONATHAN WINTERS " BOB NEWHART " SPENCER TRACY " THE WALTONS 0 CAROL BURNETT " RED SKELTON " CHARLIE CHAN BOFRANKENSTEIN LON CHANEY JR. " BING CROSBY " JOH NNY CARSON U DON RICKLES E MIKE DOUGLAS - SOUPY SALES DICK VAN DYKE " JERRY LEWIS " JAMES CAGNEY BLOOPERS FR OM TH E SPOR TS WOR LD! SILLY SHORT SUBJECTS! INCLUDING "SING ALONG WITH POPEYE" T.. COMMERICALS YOU WON'T BELIEVE! and "TH E THREE STOOGES" BLOOPERS IS A TRADEMARK OF BLOOPERS INC. C 1979 BLOOPERS, INC. UNDER 17 NOT ADMIT TED WITHOUT PARENT OR GUARDIAN .' . . O 'V LL G I T..N R L69 1300 . . . (Continued from Page 3) with King on the project. He referred to the 1970 Black Action Movement strike, during which several hundred students demanded the University strive for 10 per cent black enrollment by 1973. "Some of the same concerns we had then we have today," Williams said. New minority groups on campus are not needed, King explained. "I don't want to start a new group, because we have groups that need to be RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE SUMMER PLAYERS PRESENT BERTOLT BRECHT'S And His Hired Man A comedy for the summer Thu r 494444Juk21 1I 426-&, A28 EQudAitudu. Admission $3.00 strengthened," she said. She added that she wants to unite those in black frater- nities and sororities, minority campus organizations, and individuals. KING ALSO SAID she plans to try to keep University programs and organizations, such as the Coalition for the Use of Learning Skills (CULS) and Trotter House, from folding. "They're slowly getting rid of the black programs," she said. Besides facing an unfamiliar Univer- sity bureaucracy and inadequate per- sonal counseling, King said, many minority students are confronted with financial difficulties. "A lot of students have to leave be- cause they can't afford the bill. A lot of students are flunking out because they have to do work/study, and then get another job," King said. SOON KING WILL submit an outline of her proposals to Williams and Direc- tor of Housing Special Projects Andrea Strong. King said that although moststudents she has approached about her cam- paign support it, some have questioned whether students will have time and desire to get involved, and have cited past organizational efforts that have fallen through. "The main thing is to get everybody to work together," King said. "It's too hard to do it yourself."