'y ^ Points i was»| THE BATTALION Page 13 WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1974 Houston Channel may help nation „ HOUSTON (AP)—The Houston IJ le > Metal | Ship Channel, often called one of A was a ■ (he most polluted bodies of water in the nation, will serve as an example 1 tin A t0 c ^ art t ^ ie nat i° n s future ^4 I plans to control the dumping of wastes. and wet. " 53 - hiitlli some newfe s’is along^j one of t|, nation ential tonul, ; ond asalu r now, it'sjui midcourse correction, not a U-tum,” he said. Moore told a public meeting cal led by the commission that a $260,000 study will be made of the ship channel and bay to attempt to forecast what would happen if all the provisions of the water control act are carried out. The study will be conducted by Bernard Johnson, Inc., of Houston. Assisting as subcontractors will be the College of Business, University of Houston, to review economic and social effects; the Marine Sciences Institute of the University of Texas to review the environmental effects, and the LBJ School of Public Affairs of the University of Texas to review institutional effects, Moore said. The study will use data already collected from other historical sur veys to attempt to chart what lies ahead, he added. cm 3 Miles N. On Tabor Road Saturday Night: Darrell McCall & The Tennessee Volunteers From 9 - 1 p.m. STAMPEDE Every Thursday Nile (ALL BRANDS BEER 35 cents) I’lioto h> ; Give ill From TAGE Bryan y National t I? i cola irite ginger ;e it like is, Sours, ■roron DI®nin!. able one 80 PROOF. MocS'J; 01) • ^ Joe G. Moore Jr., program direc tor of the National Commission on J Water Quality, announced Tuesday | that the channel and Galveston Bay into which it flows will be one of 12 bodies of water studied by the commission. The commission, he said, is charged by Congress to provide in formation to see if the 1972 Water Pollution Control Act should be given “a midcourse correction” be tween 1977 and 1983. The law now requires that by 1977 any municipality must use a minimum of secondary wastewater treatment and industries must use the best practicable treatment by 1977. By 1983, Moore said, all bodies of water must be safe for swimming andean support waterlife. By 1985, all pollution must be eliminated. | “The creation of this commission grew out of a disagreein en t between the House and Senate on whether modifications in the 1983 require ments should be made,” Moore said. "We will recommend to Con gress whether there should be mid-course corrections between 1977 and 1983.” But Moore said he knows of no plans to abandon the water quality fight. “The Congress spoke of a Pot may increase bust size BOSTON (AP) — Men may de velop fully feminine breasts from heavy marijuana smoking, say two Harvard Medical School surgeons. The surgeons said they are treat ing and studying 16 males whose breast enlargement apparently is re lated to smoking marijuana. They said it probably affects both sexes. “This effect seems to occur in only a small percentage of people who use the drug,” said Drs. John Har mon, chief surgical resident at New England Deaconess Hospital, and Menelaos Aliapoulios, a surgeon at Cambridge Hospital. “It’s like digitalis, a heart muscle stimulant which also causes breast enlargement in a very few patients who take it,” they said. “So, if a woman smoked mari juana, even heavily, she might have one chance in 100, say, of increasing her breast size,” they said. The surgeons said the 16 patients are between 18 and 30 years old and smoked marijuana at least three times a week. Some smoked it daily. They said they have produced the same results in research on male rats by injecting them with THC, the psychoactive ingredient in mari juana. The most practical treatment is to surgically remove excess mammary gland tissue. The doctors said that to minimize the condition or prevent it from re curring, patients must stop smoking marijuana. fupTnamka ' Eddie Dominguez ’66 Joe Arciniega '74 Greg Price KD mm If you want the real Thing, not frozen or canned ... 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