Mar29-2012

Page 1

M T HE MONTAGE

Archers fall short at Nationals Page 12

Students play the city Page 11

Meramec’s first club Page 10

Meramec unites against violence Students and staff shares stories to raise awareness

ALEX KENDALL ART & LIFE EDITOR A bell chimes. A woman screams. “Dear stranger, I screamed and you did not listen. You hurt me and you like it. Your face haunts my dreams,” one shirt hung from a clothesline in the STLCCMeramec Quad reads. Shirts are adorned with the stories of violence and abuse. “I was only four years old,” another says. These shirts are part of the Clothesline Project, an organization established to promote the awareness and support of women who have been raped, beaten, killed and abused. “[The Clothesline Project] is here to raise awareness of violence against women and to give them a voice or allow them to express their emotion, let out some anger, just witness what’s happened to them,” said Tracy Lampkins Meramec academic advisor and Women’s History Committee member. Originally started in October of 1990 in Hyannis, Massachusetts, the Clothesline Project, now in 41 states and 5 countries, was held at Meramec for the first time three years ago. “It is a national project and we just found out about it a few years ago and brought it here,” associate professor of communications Denise Speruzza associate professor of communications and chair of the Meramec Women’s History Committee said. “We get so much feedback from people-some who decorated shirts-who are just so thankful that they have the opportunity.” Sponsored by the Women’s History Committee, The Clothesline Project

PHOTO BY: JESSE HOFFORD The Clothesline Project hangs on display in the campus quad. The project aims to raise awareness on domestic violence through sharing student and staff stories of personal accounts.

allows students both women and men to create a t-shirt for those who have been victims of violence and abuse, themselves or someone they know. “It’s a visual display and the t-shirts are created by women or men who are victims of violence or abuse. The different colored shirts represent a different kind of abuse or violence,”

Lampkins said. “And so they can draw or write on a t-shirt depending on which kind of violence they’ve experienced and then we hang it on the line. It’s kind of a visual representation of what women are experiencing.” The Clothesline Project is part of Voices Against Violence, a weeklong event that intends to raise awareness

and inform students and faculty about various aspects of violence and abuse in the community. “Most important is awareness, just that students become more aware that violence is an issue,” Sperruzza said. “We’ve encouraged faculty members to bring their class and maybe incorporate it into classroom discussions.” Story continued on page 3

RecycleMania spreads across Meramec, STLCC KURT OBERREITHER NEWS EDITOR

March 29, 2012

lbs/person

1.32 to 3.62

Wildwood

0.71 to 3.43

Meramec

0.70 to 3.44

Forest Park

Flo Valley

lbs/person

2.89 to 13.89

Cosand

4

lbs/person

6 2.7

0. 3

Weeks 1-5

Per Capita

1.24

0.08 0.1 5

0.02 0. 03

Weeks 1-5

0 0.3

www.meramecmontage.com

lbs/person

lbs

Weeks 1-5

lbs/person

Weeks 1-5

5 5.4

lbs/person

3.70 to 31.13

1.96 3. 06

1.32

10,4 72

2012

Weeks 1-5

Weeks 1-5

2 ,37 24

Volume 47 Issue 12

Recycle Mania Fever

06 0.

@themontage

by 26 metric tons – that is 14 cars off of the road or the energy consumption of seven households. On Wednesday, March 21, members of 4.1 33 7.5 8 44 7 ,15 the sustainability committee and volunteers 4 ,9 8 1.8 14 4.35 2.5 19 0 ,9 removed all of the waste from the Business 00 6 5 2 ,78 .6 .6 8 3 6 2 and Administration building and brought it to the Student Center Quad. The Waste Recycled Per Capita Minimization recyclables and trash were counted in front Materials of students. 0. 3.7 0. 40 6 08 3 Meramec Sustainability Coordinator 1.7 0.23 0.05 1.96 1.96 2 .2 Emily Neal said the focus is to get people 7 1.96 8 08 3.2 0. to reuse. “We’re trying to reduce all of our waste,” Food Service Organics Bottes & Cans Paper Neal said. “We want to see less recycling and waste. We want people to reuse. Saturday, March 31 from 8:30-2.p.m. Information from http://www.recyclemaniacs.org in Parking Lot A, Meramec and Midwest Recycling Centre are hosting a free electronics recycling drive. 6 3.0

RecycleMania has STLCC-Meramec’s sustainability committee calculating the amount of trash the school and STLCC as a whole generates each week. RecycleMania is a national challenge to increase awareness and decrease waste at colleges and universities. STLCC has been participating in the eight-week-long challenge to reduce the amount, in weight, of trash. Meramec is in the benchmark division, which means the campus is not competing with other colleges and universities, but challenging itself to be more sustainable. Each week the trash service haulers at each campus weigh paper, bottles, cans and compost. Compost is only collected in the food service areas. So far, the campus has collected 33,158 pounds of recyclable materials. In six weeks, Meramec has reduced its green house gases

GRAPHIC BY: ANABEL GONZALEZ

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