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Environmental Movement Growing at Schools
AP via Lycos.com ^ | 12/27/2002

Posted on 12/27/2002 10:53:10 AM PST by GeneD

The University of Vermont's embrace of the environmental movement has turned nearly everything on campus green -- even John Orr's 1985 blue Mercedes.

When Orr fuels up the diesel car, he tops off the tank with five gallons of recycled vegetable oil from local restaurants. The bio-fuel additive is part of a class project aimed at improving air quality.

The effort is just one example of how Vermont and a growing number of schools are employing cutting-edge technology to protect the environment.

"It's a movement that is very practical and very important in terms of walking our talk," said Vermont environmental studies professor Stephanie Kaza.

At Vermont, the movement is evident in a big composting program, the 500 solar panels on top of the campus heating plant, and the vegetable oil experiments by Orr and other student-chemists.

"Where the whole campus is involved, more and more ideas can spring up," Kaza said. "And you feel like you're not some strange crunchy-granola kid."

Next fall, Warren Wilson College will open an "EcoDorm" on its Asheville, N.C., campus.

The $1.2 million residence hall is built almost entirely with reusable and recycled materials, such as wooden farm fences that were turned into siding.

Solar fuel cells will convert sunlight into electricity and heat. Runoff from the roof, funneled through a converted 10,000-gallon railroad tank car, will provide water to the building and grounds. The dorm will also feature composting toilets and waterless urinals.

Best of all for students hit with sudden hunger pangs, all the property's shrubs and other plants will be edible.

Jared Zyskowski recently spent a year living in an enviromentally compatible home on the campus of Humboldt State University in Arcata, Calif. A highlight of the student's stay at the Campus Center for Appropriate Technology was the stationary bicycle that powered the blender that mixed his almond-milk breakfast concoction.

Although Zyskowski does not foresee Americans moving toward pedal-powered appliances, he does believe other aspects of the movement -- especially energy conservation -- will seep into the mainstream.

"In the future," he said, environmental awareness "will not be an option, it will be a part of life."

Kaza said that environmental awareness is already second nature to college students, who were taught to recycle newspapers, cans, bottles and plastic in grade school.

The National Wildlife Federation last year commissioned a report card that rated environmental education at colleges and universities. Schools got high grades for energy efficiency, efforts to upgrade water efficiency and landscaping. They received lower marks in transportation and environmental course offerings.

"Unless students are taking a biology course, they are very unlikely to learn about environmental issues," said Kathy Cacciola, coordinator of the National Wildlife Federation's campus ecology program.

Still, the report card did not capture the enthusiasm with which some students are working on ecological projects.

Upon learning that vegetable oil had proved an unexpectedly efficient bio-fuel supplement, the Vermont students responded like football players celebrating a touchdown, with shouts and high-fives.

"If you get the ball rolling in a sheltered environment," said Scott Gordon, the assistant professor of inorganic chemistry supervising the project, "then you can take it out into the cold, cruel world."

___

On the Net:

University of Vermont Environmental Council: http://esf.uvm.edu/envcncl/

Warren Wilson College: http://www.warren-wilson.edu


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; US: North Carolina; US: Vermont
KEYWORDS: colleges; enviralists; environmentalism
FWIW, AP got the Web address of the University of Vermont Environmental Council wrong.
1 posted on 12/27/2002 10:53:10 AM PST by GeneD
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To: GeneD
Upon learning that vegetable oil had proved an unexpectedly efficient bio-fuel supplement, the Vermont students responded like football players celebrating a touchdown, with shouts and high-fives.

By the end of this week they may discover that snow makes an excellent hydration supplement for mush-brained desk-puppies.

2 posted on 12/27/2002 11:00:02 AM PST by Old Professer
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To: GeneD
It's time for the GOP to get a piece of the Environmental Movement and a big piece of academia while they're at it. It's un-American to let the Left dominate these things.
3 posted on 12/27/2002 11:01:18 AM PST by Consort
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To: *Enviralists
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
4 posted on 12/27/2002 11:21:56 AM PST by Free the USA
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To: GeneD
Solar fuel cells will convert sunlight into electricity and heat. During the warm sunny months, the campus will be nice and warm. During February, you freeze as the sun hides behind the clouds.

Runoff from the roof, funneled through a converted 10,000-gallon railroad tank car, will provide water to the building and grounds and will rob a local stream of its water influx, killing endangered clams.

The dorm will also feature composting toilets and waterless urinals and a pleasant odor that will impermeate your clothes for years to come.

Best of all for students hit with sudden hunger pangs, all the property's shrubs and other plants will be smokable edible. I usually go to Wendy's.

5 posted on 12/27/2002 11:23:30 AM PST by Fudd
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To: Jimer
"It's time for the GOP to get a piece of the Environmental Movement and a big piece of academia while they're at it. It's un-American to let the Left dominate these things."

Since virtually all of the environmental movement's policies are not scientifically based, I propose we have it declared a religion so that schools cannot indoctrinate it into the children. Then, pagan Gaia worshippers can propagate their theology among their own children, not mine.

6 posted on 12/27/2002 11:31:22 AM PST by Uncle Miltie
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Comment #7 Removed by Moderator

To: GeneD
And you feel like you're not some strange crunchy-granola kid.

Sure thing, kid. And a cheap hairpiece could help me feel like I'm not a balding 46 year old dude.

8 posted on 12/27/2002 1:15:29 PM PST by Larry Lucido
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To: GeneD
I assume the guy's car was a diesel.

It's actually a cheap way to fuel such a car but, in England, a bunch of people were recently brought to trial for this. Apparently, this substitute does not carry the high fuel taxes laid on diesel oil, so the authorities got quite upset!
9 posted on 12/27/2002 1:24:24 PM PST by expatpat
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To: GeneD
And how much particulate matter does vegetable oil contribute to air pollution through automobile exhaust?
Seems to me it HAS to create more exhaust pollution than refined gas or diesel.
10 posted on 12/27/2002 1:25:59 PM PST by Drammach
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