WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1981 Local creatures are for alternate you don’t to tell you what rd menu, the lie to somepn. trouble before^ >e for sustena® hypothetical 'le from their e protein lacewig’s craviii| i flouncing 'pry with a swi r bouffant it ing impact saci d have on natin ■se, would bea >n program, we had withMt h imports fromd tgrolls. Super Scoop Photo by Jeri Jones Even young Aggies enj’oy ice cream from the Texas A&M Creamery. Six-month-old I Robert D. Miller shares an ice cream cone !sew vets to graduate this Friday Commencement ceremonies for an estimated 138 students of Texas A&M’s College of Veterin- iry Medicine will be held Friday. State Senator Kent Caperton ID-College Station) will address the graduates and their guests at the ceremony scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. in Rudder Audi torium on the main campus of Texas A&M University. Texas A&M traditionally gra- luates more veterinarians than inyother university in the nation. “IVickle Beer Night!” Lone Star Draft Beer 5® a cup Music by Dennis Ivey and Band Free Champagne and Birthday Cake While It Lasts To Celebrate Caroline Ivey's Birthday! Guys $3.00 Girls $1.00 Saturday Night 1 DARRYL, McCALL ALIGN 560 R nation i Congress . AngeliqueCopfJ janeG.M ' . Greg Can# Ritchie P™ Cathy $a® Marilyn Faulked# ion, Venitaif :tte, Kathy 0 C« Denise W Scott MeC# POLICY Of-supportingifQ v Texas A&M ^ ws expressed in], the author, am® ■„f Texas A&M» hers, oroftne aboratory ne«vm nd photograph v unications. ling any editor'* 1 OLICY iot exceed 300 at if they are i edit letters fony to maintain the , igned, show the* • e also welcome-1 , constraints r ondence to: E Texas A&M 1 lesday, Wed»*J ummer sel ^ ester $33.25 ^ S.g ».»«»*! iBeedM tD *i ege Station. » ,titled e>‘ clus ']i| lispatchescr^l matter here'"^ liege Station- ; EVERYBODY’S TALKMG ABOUT OUR SIZZLING SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE! save 50% ON MENS AND LADIES WEAR 20% OFF Wanqfer JEANS 6o okstore K TMf MCMOAUM. STUOf WT OEMTCR Noise pollution can be kept down Noise pollution doesn’t have to grow along with the cities of the Sunbelt now facing massive popu lation increases, says a researcher at Texas A&M University. “Steps can be taken to hold down noise levels that are bad for the public health and welfare,” said Dr. Carl Gerhold, a mecha nical engineer. “But it takes more than wringing your hands and saying that noise is just a price we pay for progress.” Gerhold has worked with noise problems in cities, including Houston, and is studying ways to reduce jet engine noise for the Na tional Aeronautics and Space Adminisration. The problem of noise is highly subjective, Gerhold said. What is a sound to some people is a noise to others. “Noise is a sound that annoys you,” he said, “But there are few clear examples. For instance, many people would say a loud en gine sound is definitely noise. But the people crowded into the Indy 500 race grounds would differ on that. ” Noise can be bad for one’s health, the researcher said, be cause the eardrum is like a mecha nical system. If overstressed, it can be damaged and hearing loss can occur. Noise can also cause psychological damage, he said. In growing cities, increased noise seems to slip up on citizens, Gerhold said. No one notices it growing and suddenly 10 years down the road, the sound level has increased tremendously. Some cities and even some countries have taken steps to hold down noise pollution by setting limits on the amount of sound pro duced by automobiles, factories and businesses. A traffic cop that uses a sound level meter as well as a radar unit might someday be a necessary reality, he said. “We need to measure sound levels as we grow,” Gerhold said, because fixes afterwards are very expensive. Sound walls used along large roadways in cities to hold down traffic noises can cost as much as $70 or more a linear foot, he said. Too often, noise control has been seen as a luxury item, Gerhold said. It should he given more consideration — not just ip ways to hide it, but also ways to eliminate noise in the first place through new product designs. with his father Robert B. Miller, a petroleum engineering major, during one of the hot College Station afternoons. DIETING? Even though we do not prescribe diets, we make it possible for many to enjoy a nutritious meal while they follow their doctors orders. You will be delighted with the wide selection of low calorie, sugar free and fat free foods in the Souper Salad Area, Sbisa Dining Center Basement. OPEN Monday through Friday 10:45 AM-1:45 PM QUALITY FIRST Dennis Ivey's Lake view Club The Very Best In Country-Western Music and Dancing" a Thursday ( Inventory Liquidation Sale Save 30% to 60% ON EVERYTHING IN STOCK Diamond Brokers International is moving! 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University 7 • In the George Green Building 693-1647 v Watch for Diamond Brokers’ new name and location coming soon. y