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Tuesday, November 29, 2005

More inspiration: building and roasting sustainably

Sometimes I get so excited about all of the environmental projects that are going
on in the world! From Virginia to Kenya, it's awesome. The lovely Grist.org email
update linked me to the official treehugger.com website, which I had never heard of!
(not very hardcore, but I've always  known that- AND I continue to believe
that there are issues and lifestyle choices that absolutely take precedence
over treehugging.)

The Treehugger update for today included this amazing solar powered coffee
roasting article- a sustainable coffee lover's dream come true!
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2005/11/solar_powered_c.php

So from there, I headed over to Peace Coffee to find out their email and
let them know. I mean, wow! I see a big solar panel on top of the
Green Institute, soaking it up and roasting away!

By the way, the Green Institute is awesome- I’ve included a link here:
Https://www.peacecoffee.com/green_institute.htm

A special note about their “Xeriscape landscaping” which “requires little or no water and maintenance” spread out “over a four-acre site and 100 percent storm water treatment on site through natural percolation.”If we could get this to the University, Sarita Wetland would have no (or fewer) worries. : )

Monday, November 28, 2005

How many lives have you saved? 195,000….

It’s a dirty job, but someone has to accessorize their lab coats with a helmet! (As opposed to clothes and ipod protection when cleaning-cleaning-cleaning lab equipment).

This grin-inducing news article about U professor James J. Ryan's retractable seatbelt invention was worth sharing.. I mean over 195,000 is pretty good for one guy! It's cropped by me from “His crashed helped make ours less dangerous. The legacy of U research pioneer James J. Ryan,” Rick Moore. http://www1.umn.edu/umnnews/Feature_Stories/His_crashes_helped_make_ours_less_dangerous.html

…James J. Ryan's research on car safety began in 1952, and in the ensuing decade he conducted dozens and dozens of groundbreaking--sometimes in the literal sense--experiments on automobiles. Donath showed a number of videotape clips of these experiments at his presentation on November 15. In one, a vehicle was dropped from a crane to the ground to simulate a crash speed of 40 mph. Other experiments had vehicles ramming into barriers outside of the mechanical engineering building on the East Bank of the Twin Cities campus in Minneapolis.

… Ryan acquired the "Crash" nickname for his willingness to avail himself (and occasionally some of his graduate students) as a subject in crash tests on campus. Yes, this was before the days of crash test dummies, and no, there will be no sarcastic statement here as to the relative IQs of the human subjects. (It should also be noted that Ryan did not put his graduate students at undue risk; he subjected himself to the trials ahead of his volunteers.)....


Sunday, November 20, 2005

What celebrity affords is an illusion

There is a sinking feeling of disgust in my gut over this! So apparently American celebrities deserve to own-- the moon? What a joke! This speaks to me about the fleeting nature of humanity, how sinful and futile our efforts really are, and how foolish it is that we feel deserving of owning anything. (Acts 17:24-25 The God who made the world and everything in it, being Lord of heaven and earth, does not live in shrines made by man, nor is he served by human hands, as though he needed anything, since he himself gives to all men life and breath and everything.) Read below..


Music Awards Guests Get Piece of Moon


NEW YORK - Stars appearing at Tuesday's American Music Awards will depart with a piece of the moon.
Lindsay Lohan, Will Smith, Missy Elliot and the dozens of other entertainers that are either presenting or performing at the award show will each be given a gift basket that contains nearly 100 free items - including ownership of an acre of land on the moon.
The gift bags will also include clothes, perfumes, watches, Blackberries and other various electronics - adding up to a total value of approximately $33,000. They were assembled by Hollywood Connections, a gift bag specialist.
The moon "ownership" is done by a company called Lunar Federation that plans to have the first private mission to the moon, thereby allowing it to create a Moon government and secure land rights - or so it claims. Steve Stein of Hollywood Connections, though, acknowledges the gift is more for fun than anything.
The 33rd annual special will air live from the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles Tuesday on ABC (8 p.m. EST). Cedric the Entertainer will host. The American Music Awards honor the past year's elite in contemporary music as voted by record-buy.
Found under the news heading, http://ilead.itrack.it/clients/Nedstat/c4988/popup.asp?campaignid=4988

Friday, November 18, 2005

The 'brilliant link' that couldn't

Apologies for the link that didn't work... I've pasted the LA Times article (abridged by me) below for all of your thirsty minds. (Do you think the gnomes are in favor?)

Using Ocean Waves to Power Desalination
Energetech is pairing with another Australian company to use surf- generated energy in reverse osmosis systems.
By Rory McGuire, Financial Times

Two Australian companies are claiming they can turn ocean waves into drinking water at very little cost, thanks to a combination of their technologies.Energetech Australia's initial aim was to generate cheap electricity using wave power, but it realized that in teaming up with desalination specialist H2AU it could use the same power to produce potable water at a low cost.
(In arid regions salinization of water is a hudge problem. Currently there is a million-dollar desalinization plant in Arizona that is SITTING EMPTY due to cost! Using a renewable resource (such as waves or the sun) is the ideal solution for affording this important technology.. I expect that someday most of our water will have come from desalinization plants, not wells and rivers.)

Ocean waves, so abundant and consistent, are a source of energy — and energy is the main expense of any desalination process. Most desalination installations use electricity to create the pressure needed to drive a reverse osmosis system, but the two Sydney-based, privately owned companies' combined technologies use wave pressure directly to power a reverse osmosis desalination plant. This unusual project avoids the multiple energy losses in converting wave energy to electricity before using the electricity to drive pressure pumps. The entire operation can be run off the coastline, where the residual concentrated brine is released harmlessly back into the ocean and the only land connection is a pipe carrying potable water ashore. The process involves no fossil fuels, greenhouse gases or waste, the companies say....
(It gets more technical after this... but gosh, isn't this awesome?)

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

This is Brilliant

I should share the final Brilliant article that pushed me over the edge to actually start this thing. Another hope-inspiring idea. I wish I'd thought of it.

Why I should not have a blog

Wow. Tonight’s the night.

I feel a little weird/dirty/silly for jumping on this bandwagon, but I’ve been milling over the idea of a blog in my mind for a long time, and I've been continually struck with the need for a forum to express my disgust or elation about what’s going on in our world, and how I see it.

So, here it goes. I hope this will become better, so please accept a sloppy first try.

; ) christine.

Note: Click on the title and you will find a link. that will be the routine, i suspect.