Showing posts with label vik. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vik. Show all posts

Going green can save green, CLC prof says

Vik Bhardwaj
Managing Editor

The Biological and Health Sciences Division organized 14 free lectures and hands-on events to celebrate of Earth Week April 17 through April 24. The events were led by CLC instructors and experts on topics that included conservation, environmentalism, sustainable landscaping, and Lake County wildlife.

            With the added incentive of extra credit from one of my professors, I attended “It’s Easy Being Green” hosted by Biology instructor Kelly Cartwright on April 20.

            Cartwright’s presentation was full of ways to live more environmentally friendly from what you eat to how it’s packaged as well as to how you clean.

            At the end of the presentation, Cartwright said she wanted people to realize they can change the environment.

            Some people think the leap to live more environmentally friendly is too far of a jump. Cartwright said education can bridge the gap.

            “I think everyone is going to live in the manner they see fit, but I do hope that people will start to make some small changes,” Cartwright said in an e-mail April 29.  “Most of the time people who live in a less environmentally sound manner don’t realize there are different options out there. It is all a matter of education.”

            People sometimes fail to understand going green doesn’t necessarily mean going broke.

            “Many times buying environmentally friendly products actually saves a person money because you are buying products that last longer and avoiding disposable products which tend to add up in price,” Cartwright said. “There may be a higher cost for the initial purchase but when you look at cost over period of time, the environmentally friendly options come out better.” 

            Instead of the quick-fix, fat-infested grease baskets people are accustomed to eating, a more conscientious way to satisfy hunger is to eat home-cooked, locally grown produce, and a diet without grain-fed red meat. Doing so is better for the environment, as it systematically drives down CO2 emissions.

Eating locally grown food decreases the burning of fossil fuels. To be considered local, wholefoodsmarket.com says it has to travel less than 7 hours by vehicle. Consumers should buy what is in season for their region, as this gives a market to what is locally grown.

 Buying locally also allows consumers to know where their money is going. Consumers Without this knowledge, consumers can’t know whether they are supporting unfair labor conditions in other parts of the world where many farmers work under a free trade system. Preventatively, consumers should buy local and check to make sure their products have the certified fair trade symbol to ensure the farmers better working conditions and wages.

Cartwright also discussed organic products. The term “organic” is used to describe a method of farming. According to mayoclinic.com organic farming is, “designed to encourage soil and water conservation and reduce pollution.”

Organic products are made without chemical herbicides, pesticides and antibiotics. Organic farmers prevent weeds through crop rotation and the application of mulch and manure. They use traps and birds to get rid of insects and prevent sickness and disease to animals by allowing them to roam free and eat a balanced diet. Organically grown produce may look, taste, and feel the same as conventionally grown products, and Cartwright emphasized organic product labels. All products sporting the certified USDA Organic badge are at least 95 percent organic.

Cartwright also discussed packaging and the importance of knowing what is readily recyclable. To help people better understand, a system was devised to reference the degree of recyclability of the material. A label found on recyclable materials containing a number inside the arrowed recycle triangle tells a consumer this. No. 1 and No. 2 plastics are easiest to recycle while No. 5 and No. 6 are practically unrecyclable and should be avoided.

According to thedailygreen.com, No. 1 plastics contain PETE, or polyethelene terepthlalate, and are the easiest to recycle. It’s found in soft drink, beer and water bottles, mouthwash bottles, peanut butter containers, salad dressing and vegetable oil bottles. Only 20 percent of No.1 plastics are recycled. Those that do get recycled find their way into tote bags, furniture, carpet, paneling, and even polar fleece blankets. As evidence, Cartwright brought in a polar fleece blanket that was once a plastic bottle.  Even skeptics couldn’t feel the difference from wool fleece.

No. 2 plastics contain high density polyethylene, or HDPE, found in milk jugs, juice bottles, household cleaner bottles, shampoo bottles, butter and yogurt tubs, cereal box liners, and some trash and shopping bags.  These are easily converted into laundry detergent bottles, pens, floor tile, drainage pipe, benches, doghouses, picnic tables, and fencing. Both No.1 and No. 2 plastics are generally safe for curb-side pickup.

No. 5 plastics contain polypropylene, or PP, which is found in some yogurt bottles, ketchup bottles, caps , straws, and medicine bottles. It is recycled into signal lights, battery cables, bike racks, rakes, bins, and trays. It is gradually becoming more accepted by recyclers.

No. 6 plastics have polystyrene, or PS, found in disposable plates, cups, meat trays, egg cartons, carry-out containers, aspirin bottles, and CD cases. It is made into insulation, light switch plates, egg cartons, and foam packing and carry-out containers. The trademark name for PS is Styrofoam. PS can be recycled, but the process is considered inefficient and impractical. Thus, it is better to avoid PS products.  

Cartwright next shed some light on environmentally friendly cleaning products. She said chemical-based cleaners and detergents like Pine-sol and Clorox Bleach kill more than the micro-organisms on your floors and toilets. Once they enter the water-ways and rivers that lead out to the oceans, these chemicals continue to kill micro-organisms and harm the ecosystem.

In response, a lot of cleaning product manufacturers stock shelves with greener products that are made with natural ingredients. Vinegar, lemon and citrus oil are ways to naturally clean and can be bought on their own as well.

Cartwright said she doesn’t use laundry detergent to wash her clothes because they cause harm to water ways. Instead she uses reusable, chemical-free, ionic washing disks that break up dirt. The one she brought was called the Tsunami Washing Disk. She said it effectively cleans hundreds of loads. For those tough stains and to brighten whites, an enzyme cleaner is used. Cartwright said many green products are available in stores like Target, Jewel, Whole Foods, and home improvement stores, and people can find less common items online or in catalogs like Gaiam.  

Cartwright closed with a short Youtube video of a environmentalist pup who went around collecting bottles, turning faucets off while people brushed their teeth, taking public transportation and picking up after people. To check out the link, go to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJdGPXFTMYk

Going green is so easy, even a dog can do it. 

CLC students network to get work

Vik Bhardwaj
Managing Editor


      Keith Behnke is a skilled carpenter with over 20 years of experience. He is also unemployed. 

      Keith saw a decrease in new construction jobs when the housing bubble burst about three years ago. The severity and tone of the crisis rang louder when the usually unaffected, high-end, North Shore remodeling projects Keith had been a part of started to cut back.

      “It was a wakeup call for everybody,” Behnke said. 

      Keith was recently at the Career and Placement Services Center (CPS), E101, at CLC using a computer to look for employment.  

      Keith said he knows some 800 out of work carpenters. The carpentry field is related to construction, and construction depends on a good economy.  As construction goes, so does carpentry. The Bureau of Labor and Statistics reported Lake County construction employment was down 20.7 percent February 2009 to February 2010. The latest data from the March jobs report showed construction stayed constant at 15,000 jobs. This contrasts the 72,000 jobs the industry shed each month for the past year. 

      Fortunately, construction picks up late spring to the end of summer.

      “Usually by mid-summer you’re booked,” Behnke said. 

      However, the talented pool of unemployed carpenters is so unusually deep, competition will be keen, Behnke said. Foremen are trying to assemble their crews for the work they will get in the summer. Behnke’s previous employer called him in for a meeting with news of work lined up for mid-summer. 

      Unfortunately, the summer is a couple months away.
    “I’ve got a family to feed,” Behnke said. “It’s aggravating. It’s a different thing to get used to.”
      So Behnke is going back to school. He attended trade school right out of high school and is taking classes there currently. Behnke has skills in plumbing and electrical, but the licensing takes five years. Currently he is looking for a two-year degree in Heating, Ventilating, and Air Conditioning (HVAC) from CLC.

      “I’m weighing out the career change,” Behnke said. “That’s why I was here today, to see some of my other options to go along with the experiences I already have.”

      CPS Specialist Sue Whitaker said CLC’s HVAC courses are a part of a bridge program that is designed to give students hands-on experience to help them climb up the pay ladder. She had a client five years ago who took three courses at CLC in HVAC and made $10 an hour to start. Now, he makes $26.75.

      Behnke also came to CPS because he needed help with his resume. Behnke said one wasn’t necessary before in the “dinosaur” field of carpentry. Other signs of evolution in the field are the style and location of interviews. It used to be that a foreman would take one good look at a worker and decide if he or she were the right fit, Benke said. He added he was drilled in a recent interview with questions from two different people.   

      CPS helps students, alumni and community members with resumes, career counseling, mock interviews and Internet-based job listing services. It hosts mini job fairs throughout the year. It offers students credit-based cooperative education and service learning, volunteerism, and student employment-work study. The CPS has five career counselors, three with master’s degrees and two with PhD’s.

      Whitaker said CPS differs from self-service resources such as monster.com and careerbuilder.com because of the connection she has with employers. She said she is frequently in contact with HR representatives at companies who are seeking employees and can offer a candidate a job then and there. 

      Regarding resumes Whitaker said, HR representatives sometimes have a scanner to sort through all of the candidates.  She said the scanner picks up on industry buzz words. If the company does not use a scanner, Whitaker said CPS helps to tailor the resumes to stand out by including people skills. 

      The number one way of getting jobs is through networking, according to Whitaker. At the end of the day, “humans make the final decision,” she said. 

      Whitaker deals with many clients. She tries to make her time with them worthwhile.

      “I treat every person like they are gold,” Whitaker said. “I want them to walk out of here with their heads high, hopeful, and with a second-wind to get out into the workforce.”

      Office hours of CPS are Monday through Thursday 8am to 6:30pm and Fridays 8am-4:30pm. Resume assistance is offered by appointment Mondays and Wednesdays from 9am-1pm. Contact Sue Whitaker at 847-543-2058 to set up an appointment. 

      The CPS shares building E101 with the Illinois Department of Employment Security, the Regional Office of Education and the Lake County Education to Careers Partnership.

Center powers to new location, name

Vik Bhardwaj
Managing Editor

The Student Empowerment Center, formerly known as the Student Development Center, was recently relocated from the second floor B-wing room B210 downstairs to the more spacious B120 and held its open house on from noon to 5 p.m. Wednesday. Students could socialize and lounge on one of the two sofas in the room while eating food from a variety of local ethnic and American restaurants.

The SEC is composed of the Women’s Center, THRIVE, Multicultural Student Center, and Student Retention, with Veteran’s Services coming soon. It frequently works to connect students with the Learning Resource Center, the library, financial aid and the near-by counseling office.

Aside from referrals, the center offers a multitude of ways students can “recharge,” Coordinator of the Multicultural Student Center Jorge Tennin said.

The point of the Student Empowerment Center is to get around the fact that CLC is a commuter college by helping make it a place where students can connect, Tennin added.

The change in name was to avoid confusion with CLC’s other Student Development Center, a part of Career and Placement Services.

“The (new) name is fitting,” Tennin said, although he added the name did take some getting used to. Like hearing a new song on the radio, it eventually grew on him, Tennin said.

“I saw that the meaning related and that it was something we could live up to,” Tennin said.

The purpose of the Multicultural Student Center is to have an ethnic, diverse connection and representation on campus, Tennin said.

Multicultural Student Center consists of eight clubs—Asian Student Alliance, Black Student Union, Latino Alliance, International Club, Hillel, Muslim Student Association, Pride Alliance, and South Asian Student Association.

Student Retention offers academic coaching and information on need-based grants and scholarships like Title-9 grants.

Title-9 Grant Manager and Adviser to Latino Student Alliance Rudolfo Ruiz-Velasco said the retention efforts go beyond the center. He said the student may be more or less inclined to stay in school by the total student experience, with interactions at all levels, from the janitors to the teachers.

Regarding the recent cuts across the board to colleges and four-year institutions, Tennin said the MSC is as important as ever. There are 190 students and 17 academic advisers involved in the clubs.

Four year institutions could forgo its diversity clubs on account of the vicinal connections its students have living with each other, whereas CLC couldn’t afford to since its students don’t live with each other, said Tennin.

Student, officer of Muslim Student Association and member of South Asian Student Association Osman Mohammed said the clubs are an effective way for students to develop cultural awareness.

“By having clubs at the college, students can have a place where they can fit in,” Mohammed said.

Ruiz-Velasco said the club puts students in the company of productivity. Many officers in the club are examples of achievement. They go on to four-year institutions and provide a “domino effect,” he said.

The Women’s Center was founded by Director Theresa Aguinaldo and provides financial assistance and confidentiality to women who need it. Clients are qualified and approved by the Women’s Center.

The Women’s Center, the American Association for Women in Community College, as well as CLC, all recently co-sponsored a slew of informative lectures, as well as a performance of the “Vagina Monologues” to commemorate March as Women’s History Month.

THRIVE is under the Women’s Center and provides students with free academic guidance and coaches, development workshops, study groups, peer mentors, conferences and social events to help keep students on track.

THRIVE clerk and student Liz Clark said there are two types of Women’s Center clients, traditional and non-traditional. The former may be the typical 18 to 22 year old college student. The latter make up the older students who may have jobs or families.

Clark’s first stint at college didn’t work out because she felt disconnected. She attended Penn State University. Some 15 years later, she thrives at CLC because of its closer-knit community.

Clark, a single mother, first came to the Women’s Center as a client in search of child care assistance for her 4-year-old son. She obtained it, and while looking for jobs the following summer, heard about an opening to work for the center and took it.

She can now return the favor by offering assistance to others.

“It’s the best feeling in the world,” Clark said.

She is majoring in psychology and is vice president of Student Government Association. She plans to go on to the University Center then to NIU to get her master’s.

New Student Orientation and First Year Experience used to be in B120, but moved down to the student activities office, C101. Coordinator of First Year Experience Mark Lowry said the move was more convenient in that it brought him closer to the familiar faces who started in NSO/FYE.

Lowry said his previous office won’t be sorely missed since it was in the corner and away from most student traffic, but will take the walk up to B120 to visit from time to time.

The Student Empowerment Center is open 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday through the spring semester. Brochures for all the components of the SEC can be found in C101 and B120. A bulletin board is located outside B120 with information regarding scholarships, a calendar of events, and other offerings.

A look into the cause of school shootings: Part 1

Vik Bhardwaj
Managing Editor


      The recent shootings at Northern Illinois University, Virginia Tech University and University of Alabama in Huntsville are cause to reflect on the safety of school campuses.


      Identifying the cause of these shootings has been an issue of national debate.


      A recent study by Christopher J. Ferguson at Texas A&M International University’s Behavioral, Applied Sciences and Criminal Justice Department looked into the causal relationship of violent video games and found significant “divides between existing video game research and acts of serious aggression and violence.”


      Ferguson said much of the research on violence and video games is mixed.


      For instance, Ferguson said neither the NIU shooter Steve Kazmierczak nor the VT shooter Seung-Hui Cho were violent video gamers, but the Columbine shooters Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold played a lot of the violent PC game Doom.


      The nature of correlated research is to associate two variables. In this case, violence and video games are the variables. The problem is that other important variables, such as genetics, personality, and gender are omitted from most studies. 


      CLC Psychology Professor Dr. Martha Lally said the correlation of research on violence and video games is hard to weigh with any certainty.


      Ferguson’s claim was that rather than video games, the media’s spotlight on the violence is the bigger issue because it is inaccurately greater than reality. Ferguson pointed to this as the idea of moral panic. 


      CLC Sociology Professor David Asma said moral panic occurs “when a large number of people become disproportionately fearful about an otherwise isolated event.”


      Ferguson said once fear is instilled, researchers are more likely to pass along biased studies with uneven support. Thus, societal beliefs are formed. Ferguson said the media uses this tactic to increase ratings and politicians use it for political gain.


      Asma said moral panic leads to “mean world syndrome.” This idea says that constant exposure to violent media will portray the world as a very scary place.


      In a recent CLC poll, 50 students were asked whether violent crimes were on the rise. 70 percent said it was. 


      Asma said there exists a belief that violence is on the rise, when actually the inverse is true.


      Lally and Asma said school shootings are rare. Both said primary schools are the safest places for young people.


        “Students are much safer in their schools than in their homes and their communities,” Lally said.


      Lally said bullying contributes to school violence as a whole.


        She said a lot of research has gone into making schools safer in an attempt to nip violence in the bud.


      Implementations have been made to “bully-proof” schools and a recent U.S. Department of Justice study found that from 2002 to 2008 bullying and aggression among children had decreased, Lally said.


        “We are seeing a lot of our anti-bullying programs pay off,” Lally said.
      She said an integral part of making schools safer is the cooperation from school 
counselors and teachers to target “at-risk kids.”


      This means having faculty pick up on such cues as students who suggest violence in their speech, literature or behavior.


      Asma said bullying affects certain people differently.


  “We’re all victims of bullying at one point or another,” Amsa said. “The question is what impact does that have on the individual.”


      Lally said, higher education also needs to pick up on these cues.


      Students at large four-year institutions can get lost in a sea of anonymity. Schools can keep track of students through residency hall check-ins and mentoring programs, Lally said. 


      In part two, an investigation of campus safety at CLC. Look for it in the next issue. 

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