II . u by ii H t j UUCQUl COiTEH CATZV.AY 7 " " c K Ur(i Ia I J 3 V J ) L Si rmi m nr m i re crrnnrTz FOR GUYS: u ' Leo 3-pc DcrJn Suits, Rt KOV 54X3. Joans, denies, bnsshed tzr.imz end czrCz. - Beg. $18 to $29. 11017 10.83. . LCwlicr Jscis, tuTsid lcntif flc?). $TU3. fOb C3.C3. Cpcrt Shirts, c!l klr.is end czlztz. CC3- $17 to 37X3. r:OV 14X3.- FCF1 GALS: ?:zzlz73, c!I iho nrry c!y!rs end eclsrs. n3. $12 to $43. r:oi7 ioxs to 22x3. Os. $14 13 $13. 11X3. Qzvzzz, Czzs 5 13 13. Cc. CX f:s;7 17X3. . J3cn sc"Jr ircrirciD'o rrctsys. . " : $14 13 cio. r:c;y 11x3. nrj $13 to crx i:cv; isx3. 3 13 CC2. r:a;v 0x3 to 3xa Suzsnno Brown, assistant director of programming for the Nebraska Union; fcss tcrr.pcrtri!y vacated her position to become acting assistant to Ron Gicrhan, acting vice chancellor for student affairs. The lengthy, rather confusing title of Erowns office was created when former Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Ken Bader left his position Oct. 1 to become president of the American Soybean Association. Gierhan was appoint ed acting vice chancellor, and Brown has been named temporarily to fill Gicrhan's post. Besides assisting and advising Gierhan on any projects or problems dealing with student affairs Brown also will serve as representative for the Office of Student Affairs on severd committees. Tlsose include the Council on Student life, the Student Affdrs Staff Development Committee and the Career Action Committee (CAC). Brown has a specfcl Interest in CAC because she was a member of an ad hoc committee that first initiated the program two years ago. Sara Boatman . and Gary Gilder; assistant programming advisers for Union Program Council (UPC), will take charge of Brown's vacated position as UTC pro gramming adviser. Brown has served as adviser for four years. Boatman and Gflger will receive a stipend for their increased workload, according to Union Director Allen Bennett. Bennetf will assume Brown's other pro gramming duties. Annoying noise can b$. cut by planting, professor says Irritating traffic noise often can be cut in half by selective planting of trees and shrubs, said a UNL engineering mechanics professor who has been studying the problem for eight yean. . Prof. D. L Cook is conducting research in cooperation with the VS. Department of Agriculture (Forest Service) to find ways to control noise by using tree and shrub barriers. - "Traffic noise constitutes a social rather than a medical problem, Cook said. "We are dealhg with irritation noise levels, not hearaig-damaging levels. Daytime levels above 70 decibels generally are con sidered annoying, he said. - The research consisted of three separate studies financed through the UJSr Forest Service for about $S9,C03. Initiated in Minnesota in response to interest expressed by the Forest Service, the project was later shifted to the Colorado Rocky Mountain Forest and Range Experiment Station si Fort Collins, Colo. ' "People employed by this station knew I had experience in noise studies, Cook said. After preliminary studies to deter mine the value of the research, Cook applied for the first of three grants. . Sisdcsts Itflped Working with Cook were -David Van Haverbeke, a research forester from the station at Fort Collins, and three UNL students. "The students were all .very good and Van Haverbeke has been as involved as I have. It was a cooperative effort, Cook said. Although the third study has not been completed, Cook said" some conclusions could be drawn. ; "I personally think a combination of trees and some sort .of solid barrier is the best compromise solution in a majority of cases, he said. "Trees are not the only way to control noise, but in many - situations they are the fesst means avail-' able. The studies showed that wide belts of : trees planted 25 to 50 feet from the noise source effectively screen highway traffic noise. Construction of dirt dikes can pro vide immediate relief from noise before the trees grow tall enough, Cock said. SmsSar trees ssstsd - To reduce suburban traffic isoise, Cook suggested planting smaller, higher density trees 15 to 20 feet from the noise source. However, he said that barriers were not effective in controlling noise from large trucks. Because little previous work has been done csi the subject, the first study was Otute general. Cock add. Conducted 100 miles northwest cf Lincoln in the Flstte Valley area, it experimented with the use cf trees and shrubs in noiss abatement - The second study ceabiaed trees tad; dirt dikes to form btnkrs ;sxd wes con ducted in Hastings. . Existing shelterbelts were used in the first and second studies, Cook said, but because suitable natural sites were difficult to find, the shelterbeH in Hastings was modified by constructing a dirt dike with in the belt. Tape-recorded truck noise was used as a noise source in. the first two studies, although actual traffic noise was used almost exclusively as a source in the final study, he said. Cook is completing the third study of suburban traffic noise on South 56th Street between A Street and Valley Road in Lincoln. He said many residents whose backyards face 56th Street have used trees or wooden fences as visual screens, wliich also helped reduce noise levels. ' Results of the research have been dis tributed to forestry organizations, highway planners and environmental groups interested in, reducing noise, Cook said. n hm II UN Lb U 7! 3 mm ii q o i - - SI I - in tern Cur csli incluibs' i I m 1 1 1 t mm. f J 10. W.i L. ,lLJ ...J ,3