The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, June 14, 1978-Page 7 Normal relations with China Carter's intent WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter has told an international business group that his administration intends to move toward normal relations with China while maintaining aid to Taiwan. Sources close to the Trilateral Com- mission said Carter emphasized in a talk Monday that the United States is opposed to China's use of force in any effort to reunite Taiwan with the mainland. The President gave no timetable for establishing full relations with Peking, the sources said, and several of his ad- visers insisted yesterday that none has been set. The United States maintains full relations currently with the Nationalist government on Taiwan and a lower level liaison office in Peking. THE TRILATERAL Commission, established in 1973 by financier David Rockefeller, is a private group of businessmen and scholars from Western Europe, North America and Japan. Carter's national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, assured the communist leadership last month in Peking that the President was "deter- mined" to work toward full nor- malization of U.S.-Chinese relations. In reaffirming this intention, Carter emphasized that U.S. trade with Taiwan as well as military aid must be continued. Current appropriations call for $10 million in easy-credit loans for the Nationalist government to buy military equipment. The Peking government is deman- ding the United States end its defense treaty with Taiwan. A U.S. official, who asked that he not be identified, said that once full diplomatic relations are established with Peking the treaty will be terminated. Daily Photo by JOHN KNOX YESTERDAY'S EPA RULING replacing the name "smog" with "ozone" may give Ann Arbor a break in its air pollution control efforts. No more smog; it will be ozone from now on From AP and UPI Smog died yesterday. Smog's death was attributed to bureaucratic fiat. 'Well known to many city dwellers, he was believed to be in his late 30s. Smog's final passage was announced by Douglas Costle, administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). A CURIOUS mixture that defied analysis, Smog was born in London in the 1940s. He was the son of Smoke and Fog, once pillars of British society. But smog is not really dead; his name was just discarded and replaced with ozone. At the same time, the EPA ruled to allow more of the stuff in the air, before making it illegal. The EPA also in effect gave several south central Michigan cities - in- cluding Ann Arbor - a break on their air pollution control efforts. THE AGENCY said smog would now officially be called ozone, the only com- ponent of smog which scientists measure and the one on which com- pliance with the law is based. In the past, the agency had used the term "photochemical oxidents" to describe what happens when hydrocar- bon and nitrogen dioxide from car exhaust and other sources are exposed to sunlight. The primary standard for ozone would be .10 parts per million per hour, compared to a level of .08 which has been in effect since 1971. EPA SAID some of the 103 cities with populations over 200,000 which it iden- tified last March as not meeting the existing ozone standard now would be in compliance. Besides Ann Arbor, they are Pueblo and Colorado Springs, Colo.; the Cen- tral Florida area including Orlando; Omaha, Neb.; and the South Central Michigan area including Lansing, Kalamazoo and Battle Creek. EPA Administrator Douglas Costle said, "New health effects data, as well as a better understanding of existing data, calls for this change in the stan- dard. The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at AUD A Wednesday, June 14 TRAFFIC (Jacques Tati, 1971) 7 ONLY-AUD A In his continuing role of Monsieur Hulot, French comedian and director Jacques Tati creates a comic hero as distinctive and endearing as Chaplin's Charlie. With his remarkable handbag of mime and visual gags, Tati injects his comedies with spontaneity and realism. In TRAFFItC Monsieur Hulot, entrusted with taking a newly-invented coamper to Amsterdam for oan auto show, encounters unpre cedented misfortunes. Waormly humorous, idyllic sequences in the Dutch countryside. THE CROOK (Claude Lelouch, 1971) 9 ONLY-AUD A An ex-laowyer turned master criminal escoapes from, prison to recoveo the million-dollar loot from his lost job and flees to the Unitd States., An unexpected hitch suddenly appears. Jeaon-Louis Trintignant stars in this penetrating look of the French underworld. tI French, with English subtitles. Plus fbot: RMNDEVOIS (Claude lelouch). A mad dash through theeaorly morningstreets of Paris in a Ferrari sportscar. Tomrrow: SertolueI's "(AST TANGO IN PARIS"