Diamond Enthusiast

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Congrats Yafa
Just put down any science you might be interested in. When you meet with your advisor, make sure he/she knows you are undecided. At the beginning, it doesn't matter too much what your declared major is, and many people change before they're done. Take some introductory science classes. At most schools, intro chemistry and physics will be required for biology, chemistry, biochemistry, physics, environmental science, and geology majors anyway, and having at least an introductory level knowledge of other sciences is likely to help you with whatever science you do eventually choose.
The one thing to be cautious of is that there are sometimes multiple introductory courses. At my undergrad, for example, there were two sets of introductory physics classes. One set met the biology major and general education requirements, but it didn't meet the chemistry and physics major requirements. The other set met requirements for any of the science majors, including biology and biochemistry. Talk to your advisor about this, and check the requirements (in the course catalog or department websites usually) for the majors you are interested in.
About just picking 'general science.' The college may let you do that for now (that's what I did at first). If they do, that's probably the best move for now. But, even if your school offers a mjor in just 'science,' I would pick eventually pick one if you plan on doing research. Diversity is good (I took a lot of non-chemistry courses), but not having a major in a particular science wil hurt you in research.
[This message was edited by methos5000 on 03-24-03 at 09:33 AM.]
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