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Meta
Autor: Writer
~ 12/05/06
Of the approximately 1,400 students who will graduate from Universidad Nacional (UNA), in Heredia, north of San José, this month, 242 are from two of the poorest regions in the country, according to a statement from the university: the indigenous reserves of Chorotega, in the northwestern Guanacaste province and Brunca, in southern Costa Rica.
Yesterday and today, graduation ceremonies are being held in Liberia and Nicoya, in Guanacaste, at which 52 students from the Chorotega indigenous reserve are receiving diplomas. 190 students from the Brunca reserve, in the Southern Zone, also graduated earlier this month.
Of UNA’s 1,400 graduates, 240 received degrees in science, 293 received liberal arts degrees, 295 received degrees in education and 314 received social science degrees, according to the statement.
-Tico Times
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Autor: Writer
Representatives of hotels in the Central Pacific beach towns of Manuel Antonio and Quepos recently met to discuss water conservation techniques for the area, which continually faces water shortages, at a conference organized by the Central American Biomass Users Network (BUN-CA), according to a statement from the organization.
An increase in tourists to the area during the dry season resulted in periods with no water available, said BUN-CA consultant Agustín Rodríguez.
“This lack of water affects the development of the hotels’ normal activities, and, on many occasions, hotels have had to contract trucks to bring in water from other areas,” Rodríguez said.
Twenty representatives from the area attended the workshop, entitled “Good and Efficient Practices in the Use of Water Resources” and learned conservation strategies such as using low-consumption toilets and showers. Treating and recycling pool water rather than draining it was another suggestion made.
Data obtained at the seminar indicates that some hotels pay more than $2,000 per month for water, another reason to make conservation efforts, Rodríguez said.
The seminar was part of BUN-CA’s Energy Efficiency in the Tourism Sector Program. Hotels that participate in the program qualify for a Certificate of Sustainable Tourism from the Costa Rican Tourism Institute (ICT), the statement said.
-Tico Times
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