Friday, October 7, 1983/The Battalion/Page 5 -CS 21 percent cleaner now than 14 months ago ion barbeque 1116 says - by Clara N. Hurter Battalion Reporter Clean. That’s what Brazos utiful, Inc., hopes to make an-College Station, ccording to a recent survey, ’re succeeding. The area is I percent cleaner than it was 14 icnths ago, exceeding Brazos ititiful’s goal by 1 percent, razos Beautiful is trying to n up the community by mak- ig people aware of the litter, “The Bryan-College Station area has a solid waste problem,” Suzy Terral, executive coordi nator of Brazos Beautiful, says. “Getting the public to recog nize that there is a litter problem and changing their attitudes ab out the way to handle it is our main goal,” she says. Those attitudes are changing mainly because of Brazos Beautiful’s door-to-door public ity at local businesses and resi dences, Terral says. hold its annual Reiinn ore the football gamtl ence Pavilion on JetJ r. The National Ar| g the dinner, and lid agriculture Dean'sofi and former studens! id. BQto honor ryan resident holarships by David Manning Battalion Reporter he third annual Bonfire Be- efit Barbecue will be held /e received W VtJ Iturday at the Grove immedi- rships. Chose; hi f following the Texas A&M- -Juntingdon.Pennsiii r ersit y of Houston football mes Heath ofTopd ime ' Kenneth Kolodozita [Arthur Collier, owner of Col- nio; Donnie JohnsoEi et Electric Co. in Bryan, will be ilphur Springs; and|{ >nored at the barbecue for his elp in providing equipment cept Johnson,amaniind supplies for construction of s studying engineer] te bonfire during past years. Previous barbecues were de led to H.B. Zachry, former [dent and San Antonio con- tor and Col. Tom Parsons, [mer Corps commandant and ftt director of security and if fit. cs scheduled kly dance classes ling and taking das and bring $20 foti re offered as folloit 7 p.m. to 8 p.tti. onday from 8 pjJ sday from 9 p.m. to om 7 p.m. to 8 pa i 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. from 6:30 p.m. to i; from 7:3U p.m. loi; Stan Hausman, a senior in rge of bonfire finances, said I barbecue is one of the major [id-raising r’We’re ; projects, hoping ping to make $2,000 off the barbecue,” he said. This year’s budget for bonfire is expected to exceed $10,000. The University will provide $5,500 for bonfire expenses, which will come from the Memorial Student Center book store project fund. Kathy Seeberger, women’s coordinator for bonfire, said women’s residence halls will raise money for bonfire by sell ing back rubs and donuts and by sponsoring a dance. Last year, the women’s dorms raised about $5,000. The money raised for bonfire is used to buy fuel for the trucks and to purchase bailing wire, rope and other items for the bonfire, Hausman said. Tickets for the barbecue are $4.75 for students and $7 for non-students and may be purch ased today at the MSC or tomor row at the gate. farmers to buy iamaged grain fund-raising can* ama’s Pizza restaum: come by The Baltalii United Press International Monday from9pni p.m. to 10 p.m, from 8 p.m. to 9p4WASHINGTON — The Sen- ly from 7 p.m.toSp:[ e Thursday approved legisla- 1 anyone may join ori requiring the government jell 83 million bushels of dam- id grain to drought-stricken Jmers and ranchers who are lughtering starving livestock. The legislation pushed by Ixas’ two senators, and co- ibnsored by several other sena- Irs from the drought-stricken ion, is aimed at circumvent- ig Agriculture Secretary John lock’s refusal to release the Ranchers and farmers are /2k Q t Pog forced to slaughter their 3 d L r rv ‘ n 8 foundation herds and Iher livestock because the worst Ipught in decades has killed cs. One students (he animals’ feed sources, st the man in theili-l'The bill was unanimously ;n the third andtfassed by the Senate as an of Hughes Hall JBendment to the Dairy and I student walkedpaSRibacco Adjustment Act of wler Hall breezewfts. i identified the raw; Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D- ce picture line-up Ifexas, told his colleagues it has vho previouslyrefifost taxpyaers $48 million >s warning, was; annually to store the grain since versityPoliceand the Russian grain embargo and County Jail. He t it is of to poor quality to export ary statement, Um ’or use in the Payment-in-Kind said. Bogram. | “Livestock producers are in HER: desperate need of feed,” he said, secretary in the Ci | - “What better use could this dam- ng Department te aged grain be put to than to pro- mg obscene teleffljde emergency feed assistance work. She said tht to livestock producers in is started calling drought areas? Livestock producers are will- ing to pay for this grain,” he said. “In addition, they will transport it themselves. Taxpayers will not have to pay any transportation charges and they will no longer have to pay storage charges on the grain that is sold.” Bentsen said range specialists in the 25 west Texas drought counties declared disaster areas say 60 to 70 percent of the cattle, sheep and goat herds have been liquidated because of the drought. Bentsen said Block’s announcement of lowered Far mers Home Administration emergency loan interest rates may help ranchers “but most tell me they already have too much debt.” “They need something a cow can eat, not another note at the bank,” he said. “The irony of this tragic situation is that help is, li- terally, right around the corner.” Several million bushels of the damaged grain are stored in the middle of drought-parched West Texas. Sen. John Tower, R-Texas, said the legislation was an “effec tive way to release urgently needed grain to West Texas ran chers who are in danger of los ing even their foundational herds to the worst drought in almost 30 years.” “I am confident this provision will be passed in the House and this relief will be forthcoming to our ranchers,” he said. held on the eveninji 1 ':00 ,U the fl-1 Loilf 6:30 at Corp are! ':00 in the fronttoufjl he Commons (Krueger ^ ns will includei# ept of responsible ir"' nning D.W.I. and#' # '‘Room -4*. Serving ^ Luncheon Buffet Sandwich and t Soup Bar | Mezzanine Floor I Sunday through Friday ■ x 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. ureness Heek ;he Battalion. Delicious Food l0 d( i,i4 Beautiful View ^ sponsit | i Open to the Public “Quality First” s £H5-SiS l “We go to businesses and in dustries and tell them about Brazos Beautiful,” Terral says. “Usually they are glad to help.” Helping means various things from putting trash cans in the parking lot to mowing the small strip of bushy grass along the building, she says. “When one man mows his lawn and his neighbor sees him, the neighbor is influenced to go out and mow his own lawn,” she says. Bryan-College Station is cleaner now because people are ‘When one man mows his lawn and his neigh bor sees him, the neigh bor is influenced to go out and mow his lawn.’ own influenced by their neighbors, she says. Brazos Beautiful, the local chapter of the Clean Commun ity System, is a division of Keep America Beautiful. Keep America Beautif ul sup plies step by step instructions for a photometric index, which me asures the amount of litter in a specified area, Terral says. A map of the area is divided into sections, cut up, and put into an envelope, Terral says. Then six areas are randomly picked from the envelope for each survey, she says. Parking lots, vacant lots, load ing docks, commercial garbage containers, street blocks and street right-of-ways in Bryan- College Station were surveyed June 30 and July 1, 1982, when the photographs were taken. A team of six volunteers, three from College Station and three from Bryan, are sent to the selected areas to take photo graphs, Terral says. Then the photographs are blown up and a count of the litter is made, she says. Photographs taken in this past August indicate a decrease in the pieces of litter per photo graph, Terral says. Keep America Beautiful re quires that its chapters take sur veys every six months, Terral says. 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