14-Friday July 25, 1980-The Michigan Daily I I I I I Summer shenanigans Three young boys find an unusual way to beat the summer heat. They stand by a roadside puddle in Westerly, Rhode Island, encouraging passing motorists to splash them. FORECASTS INCREASING HUNGER, POLLUTION: Study predicts grim future . WASHINGTON (UPI) - The gover- nment's most comprehensive study of the future laid down yesterday a grim warning of a world that will be in- creasingly crowded, hungry, polluted and unstable by the year 2000 - unless international action heads off the problems. Secretary of State Edmund Muskie, presenting the massive study "Global 2000," said, "World population growth, the degradation of the earth's natural resource base and the spread of en- vironmental pollution collectively threaten the welfare of mankind." HOWEVER, HE said, "Global 2000 is not a prediction. If we begin our work now, we will say in twenty years that Global 2000 was wrong. What a glorious achievement that would be." President Carter, presented with the report, responded by naming Chairman Gus Speth of the Council on Environ- mental Quality to chair a special presidential task force to come up with specific policy recommendations within about six months. The study, more than three years in the making, says the present world population of four billion will grow to 6.35 billion by the year 2000, with the most explosive growth in those coun- tries least able to afford it, especially Latin America. Ninety per cent of the growth will oc- cur in the poorest countries. ARABLE LAND will increase by only about four per cent so that - even given more efficient agricultural methods - 800 million people will go hungry. The easiest means of increasing agricultural production - artificial fer- tilizers and mechanized equipment and pumps - will require more energy. But the poorest two-thirds of the world will not be able to afford the new, expensive forms of alternative energy. Even firewood, already becoming scarce as forests are chopped down or taken over by deserts, will be 25 per cent short of requirements in the poorest countries. The forecast says even soil to grow food will be in short supply, as the earth is washed away or poisoned. Violinist's body found bound in et airs haft I NEW YORK (UPI) - The body of a woman violinist who vanished between the acts of a Berlin Ballet performance at the Metropolitan Opera House was found nude, bound and gagged yester- day in an airshaft at the concert hall. Police said violinist Helen Hagnas Mintiks was on her way to "an artistic discussion" in the opera house with Valery Panov, the Soviet defector who is a dancer and choreographer with the Berlin company, when she disap- peared. "She never arrived and was not seen from that point on," said Richard Nicastro, chief of Manhattan detec- tives. AN AUTOPSY was ordered to deter- mine the cause of death. Nicastro said it had not been determined if she was the victim of a sexual assault. A police spokesman said Mintiks, 30, performed with a freelance American orchestra accompanying the Berlin Ballet at an 8 p.m. performance Wed- nesday. After intermission at 9:30 p.m., she left the orchestra pit to meet with Panov, police said. The exact nature of her planned meeting with Panov was not known, and the Soviet ballet dancer could not be reached for comment. Her body was found at 9:15 a.m. in a ventilation shaft on the third floor of the opera house. Nicastro said the shaft was accessible from a staircase and through an unlocked door. 4