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ACCT 328
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Page 12 •The Battalion
Thursday • February 15,1
Ijgl
ACCT 229
Part 1
8pm-10pm
ACCT 229
Part II
8pm-10pm
ACCT 229
Part III
8pm-10pm
ACCT 229
Part IV
8pm-10pm
I I III
Ijiiiii I
ECON 203
ECON 203
ECON 203
ECON 203
Part 1
Part II
Part III
Part IV
1 |jj:|
1(1:1 j
8pm-10pm
8pm-10pm
8pm-10pm
8pm-10pm
E fE i!
For Professor Meer
if
m l
BANA 303
BANA 303
BANA 303
BANA 303
1 !
J: J |:: i fj
Part I
Part II
Part III
Part IV
I â–  IK I
8pm-10pm
8pm-10pm
8pm-10pm
8pm-10pm
1 m
ACCT 229
ACCT 229
ACCT 229
ACCT 229
If I
::d
.
Part 1
Part II
Part III
Part IV
10Dm-12am
10Dm-12am
10pm-12am
10pm-12am
Recycle
Continued from Page 1
McAllister said he recognized
the waste problem at Northgate
several years ago.
“I’ve lived here for 15 years
and have personally witnessed
how much beer drinking goes on
in this town,” he said. “I’ve also
seen how wasteful people are
and it’s ridiculous.”
With the help of Katie Gibson,
city of College Station recycling
coordinator, Collins, Shaw and
McAllister were able to have a
trash bin placed behind The Dry
Bean for bottles to be disposed of
after Northgate bars close.
The bin has a
lock that only bar
owners and em
ployees have ac
cess to, which he
said should deter
people from
throwing other
trash in it.
Shaw and
Collins are now
working to let people know the
recycling bins are there for a
reason.
“For some reason, recycling
still hasn’t taken off around
here,” Collins said. “This
program is an easy
way in which stu
dents can monitor
the amount of bot
tles thrown away.”
She hopes to ex
pand the recycling
program to other
bars and clubs soon.
Some Northgate
bars sell reusable bot
tles in an effort to be environ
mentally conscious.
Nature
Continued from Page 2
SCONA
Continued from Page 1
delegates form opinions and
form ideas to take back to
their campuses.
“They are beneficial to even
nonpolitical students because
everyone has an opinion but not
everyone has an educated opin
ion,” she said. “These discussions
give you a chance to hear a lot of
different views and form an edu
cated opinion.”
This year, Dr. Thomas Mann,
director of Governmental Studies
at the Brookings Institute, will
give the conference’s keynote
speech Thursday at 6 p.m.
Mike McBrierty, a senior polit
ical science and international
studies major and SCONA vice
chair of programs and research
development, said Mann is the
most renowned political science
speaker in the country.
A panel discussion titled “A
Government Of the People, By
the People, and For the Peo
ple?” will be held Friday at
10:45 a.m. Mann, Alex Benes,
co-founder and managing direc
tor of the Center for Public In
tegrity, and U.S. Rep. Jack
Fields will participate.
Jim Pinkerton, author of
“What comes Next: The End of
Big Government and the New
Paradigm Ahead,” will speak
on “Replacing the Bureaucratic
Operating System” Saturday
at noon.
Cindy Casares, a junior ele
mentary education major and
SCONA vice chair of public rela
tions, said conference speakers
present challenging and informa
tive ideas.
“One of the best things about
sharing ideas is being able to
form an educated opinion to
take back to your University,"
she said.
The SCONA committee starts
planning each year’s conference
18 months in advance.
The committee takes a trip
each spring to Washington,
D.C., to consult with political
experts on the conference topic
and its speakers.
SCONA does not receive any
funding from A&M, but raises on
its own the $43,000 needed to put
on a conference.
Former President Lyndon
Johnson, Ross Perot, Nobel Prize
winners and former U.S. vice
presidents have spoken at
SCONA conferences.
4
102,
“(The study) gives some sup
port to the belief that peopl-
have had for a long time thii
exposure to the natural envi
ronment can relieve stress'
Parsons said.
Ulrich said the experimeti
bothered him because expose
to environmental influences
was minimal, yet stress levels
still increased.
He said this suggests stress
would increase even more dur
ing a real commute.
The ultimate goal of this
line of research, he said, isto
provide recommendationsto
city planners.
“Ultimately, this couldte
used by those who are plar
ning urban development,” Par lafgGS
sons said. ilfai
“It has some implicationsfo
the environment that you
on roadsides.”
The 160 participants in the
study were students in AH
introductory psychology cours
es who received research cred
its for their involvement.
The study was conceptual
ized Fall 1991 and results
were submitted for publication
Fall 1995.
It was co-authored by Tassi
nary, Parsons, Ulrich, and two
graduate students, Michele
Grossman and Michelle Hebl.
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