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Event Details
Additional information about recent and upcoming events
3 R's.
Affluenza.
The Three R's Revisited: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
The Natural Resources Committee of the League of Women Voters of the Upper Valley Presents its 2010 Series on the Environment:
The Three R's Revisited: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
Feb 1: Creating a Recycled Treasure
Bring a friend and join us at the AVA Gallery to hear
Stuart White, Senior Architect with Banwell Architects, discuss transforming this former garment factory into a LEED-certified art gallery.
- 5 to 7 pm, AVA Gallery, 11 Bank Street, Lebanon
- Admission: $10, includes wine, cheese and tour of building
Feb 17: Lebanon Landfill: A Hidden Treasure
Marc Morgan: Solid Waste Manager, City of Lebanon
Wayne Bonhag, President: Bonhag Associates
(Mechanical-Electrical-Energy Engineers)
- Converting methane to energy at the Lebanon landfill
- Landfills as a source of untapped energy
Feb 25: Recycling Plastics: Trash or Treasure?
Robert Malloy: Chair, Department of Plastics Engineering, University of Massachusetts
- Economic and environmental impact of recycling plastics
- End products of recycled plastics
- Designing new products for enhanced recyclability
Co-sponsors: Sierra Club and Sustainable Hanover
Reycling Resources
Affluenza
Here's what the Library Journal had to say about Affluenza:
"De Graaf, producer of the PBS documentaries Affluenza (1996) and Escape from Affluenza (1998); David Wann, a former EPA staffer and expert on sustainable lifestyles; and Thomas H. Naylor, professor emeritus in economics at Duke, have assembled an updated and more in-depth look at the epidemic of overconsumption sweeping the United States and the rest of the world, based on de Graaf's documentaries. They define "affluenza" as "a painful, contagious, socially-transmitted condition of overload, debt, anxiety, and waste resulting from the dogged pursuit of more" and examine the spiraling cycle of overconsumption, spending, stress, and broken relationships caused by America's obsession with uncontrolled economic
growth at any cost. This witty yet hard-hitting book provides evidence of the social problems caused by the American obsession with acquiring "stuff" and proposes solutions for living more sustainably."
- Library Journal review
Sponsored by the LWV-UV and the Howe Library
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Last revised: February 11, 2010 20:27 PST.
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League of Women Voters of the Upper Valley, New Hampshire. All rights reserved.
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