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Friday, May 9, 2008
NU launches campus-wide recycling


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From left, Hannah Baker, Hannah Limov and Felicia Hall stand by a mesh recycle bin at Nevada Union High School. They are the "Go-green" commissioners of the NU student body executive council.
From left, Hannah Baker, Hannah Limov and Felicia Hall stand by a mesh recycle bin at Nevada Union High School. They are the "Go-green" commissioners of the NU student body executive council.
The Union photo/Soumitro Sen
An 8-foot-tall mesh recycling bin stood in the middle of the sunlit amphitheater at Nevada Union High School Thursday, one-quarter full of white assignment sheets, Excel spreadsheets and poster papers.

Reinette Senum estimated the bin probably would overflow after five days of school, as it received material from smaller recycle bins across the campus.

At a time when environmental issues are a hot topic at summits worldwide, Senum, a co-founder of the local nonprofit PowerUp-NC, is doing the recycling project at NU to help students see "the huge impact their day-to-day activities have on the planet," she said.

"This is a good way to physically show the campus how they affect the environment by what they use on campus," said 17-year-old Hannah Limov, a junior at NU. "People should first reduce what they use. If they can't, they should reuse things. As a last resort, they should recycle."

Starting today, used papers will be stashed in blue recycling bags in rooms across NU, Senum said. Next Thursday, all the bags will be emptied into the mesh bin to show students how much paper they used in a single week.

Finally, the entire volume of papers will be weighed to determine the number of trees and other natural resources that went into their production, Senum added.

On the amphitheater wall, a long blue poster bears more than 120 names of students who already have participated in the project. By next week, the number of names could increase to 200, Senum estimated.

"It's hard to change the way people think," said Felicia Hall, a 16-year-old junior. "But students are catching up (with recycling) because it's a new fad."

The mesh recycling bin could strike some students as "a complete waste of time, but to many others, it opens their eyes to see how many trees are actually used in a 24-hour period," Hall added.

Hall and Limov are "Go-green" commissioners for the 2008-09 school year in the student body executive council at NU.

"This is the beginning of a new future for NU," Hall said. "A lot of green projects will be implemented in the future. This is just one visual that students can see."



To contact Soumitro Sen, e-mail ssen@theunion.com or call 477-4229.


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