LIFEGUARD TRAINING COURSE College Station Parks & Recreation & Texas A&M Pool Management will' be holding the National Pool & Waterpark Training Course on January 9, 10& 11, 1990. January 9 6-10 pm College Station Community Center January 10 12-3 & 7-11 Texas A&M Indoor Pool January 11 12-3 & 7-11 Texas A&M Indoor Pool This course is for anyone wanting to obtain E&A Lifeguard Certification. Call College Station Parks & Recreation, 764-3773, for more information. Page 12 The Battalion Thursday, December7, Environment SEAFOOD RESTAURANT HAPPY HOUR ALL DAY MONDAY Sun.-Thur. 2-5 New Items: • Fish Basket $4.95 • Shrimp Basket $4.95 • Large Catfish Dinner $5.95 w/Hushpuppies, FF, Coleslaw • Mate Plate $5.95 3 Fried Shrimp, 1 Catfish Filet 206 East Villa Maria 775-9079 Spark Some Interest! Gse the Battalion Classifieds. Call 845-2611 (Continued from page 11) Chase supports the Sierra Club, the Wilderness Society and the World Wildlife Federation. Although Chase is not a member of Texas Environmental Action Co alition, a campus organization, she said she probably will join in the fu ture. “I see them as the only option on campus right now to get anything done,” she said. But Chase does more than send money through the mail. She is en thusiastic about starting an educatio nal club, as part of TEAC or inde pendently, on campus that would present a conservation program ev ery two months. The educational club could pre sent conservation programs at the request of any group. Chase said. She said many clubs do not include conservation in their agendas. “If they give us a night, we’ll give them a program,” she said. Educating individuals about their role to keep the community clean is also a goal of Brazos Beautiful, Inc. Brazos Beautiful Inc. is a volun teer organizaton with one paid em ployee, Diane Craig, who serves as executive director. Craig said many people don’t think about preserving the environment. ★“This is why Brazos Beautiful Inc. sponsors programs that help ev eryone, while raising awareness,” she said. Such programs as Adopt-a-High- way, the Big Event, a memorial-tree program and a crepe-myrtle-plant- ing program get the community in volved in cleaning up and beautify ing the area, Craig said. ★ Brazos Beautiful Inc. spon sored a “Trash-Out” on Nov. 4 to clean up litter on Texas Avenue for economic, as well as aesthetic and health reasons, Craig said. Busi nesses do not want to locate in a dirty community, she said. The group also promotes recy cling in the area by maintaining re cycling bins in parking lots around town. Craig said recycling not only prevents litter, but saves natural re sources. She said although Brazos Beauti ful, Inc. gets strong community sup port, it cOuld use more because it helps everybody. “We cross economic strata,” she said. “We exist totally for the citizens of Brazos County.” Liz Edwards, co-president of TEAC, said TEAC also promotes paper and aluminum can recycling. “Recycling is the First place TEAC gets people,” she said. “Recycling makes conservation very easy for ev eryone.” Edwards said one of her favorite TEAC programs is BioCamp, a sum mer program at the College Station Community Center to educate chil dren in kindergarten through eighth grade about environmental issues. TEAC members also have written letters protesting Icelandic whaling and President Bush’s apparent lack of action on the rain forest issue. Edwards said she would like to see TEAC become as prominent as the Student Council On National Affairs and the Jordan Institute, two MSC groups that regularly bring nation ally recognized speakers to A&M. “I think we’re as important as those groups,” she said. The Sierra Club is another Brazos County organization that aims at in creasing the community’s apprecia tion for nature and involving others in conservation. “(The Sierra Club) is giving peo ple who aren’t necessarily students a chance to get involved,” Michael Worsham, Sierra Club vice chair, Recycling is the first place TEAC gets people. — Liz Edwards, co-president, TEAC said. “Some people who I’ve talked to didn’t want to get involved with a group (made up) primarily of stu-. dents.” The Sierra Club sponsors an out ing once a month, Worsham said. He said the Sierra Club participated in the Texas Land Office’s Texas Coastal Cleanup in September and helped clean up Matagorda Island. In October, the Sierra Club went to the Big Thicket State Preserve in East Texas, and group members participated in hikes, canoe trips and discussion groups. People can learn about the Sierra Club in several ways, Worsham said. Local businesses, such as Half Price Books, Records and Magazines and Brazos Natural Foods, distribute fliers and membership cards. The national Sierra Club office also mails out membership forms. Ducks Unlimited is another^ that has grown steadily. Dj Chairman Mike Byington saioj non-profit, fund-raising tion has an extensive networkofil land restoration projects reaches throughout three county Canada serves as a bret ground for 70 percent of kJ American water fowl, ByingtorJ He said the group has expandtl restoration to wintering grounef well as breeding grounds in Car; the United States and Mexico Ducks Unlimited has coiti|)( alxmt 3,600 projects to restorcia than five million acres, BvtJ said. Projects include wetlands ation and flood control. The group spent $60 i wetland habitat restoration in l| Byington said. Ducks Unlimite involved with five projects in Taj Mike Palermo, Ducks Unlii banquet committee member, s ducks breed in shallow pondsn easily dry up. Therefore, Duels! limited creates swamp areas j ducks and other wildlife. ThisJ ducks have a better chanceforsil val, and then they migratesouil said. Palermo said an annual basil provides the main source of fj for Ducks Unlimited, with tlien jority of the money going totlJ tional chapter. He said the group also s* (j funds from businesses, and i have get-togethers throughout year. This year they had thef Ducks Lbilimited golf tournamet: Audubon Society PresidentliJ Arnold said his group supponsi Brazos Valley Museum and; l exas Breeding Bird Project.