黑料正能量

Tag Archives: Sustainability

Designing for Health

After being exposed to a variety of toxic substances while renovating his home in 1980, Clint Good, class of 鈥77, developed hypersensitivities to compounds in paints, adhesives and other building materials. He was just 27 years old. Good visited numerous doctors as he struggled to regain his health. He began paying close attention to the

Straw Bale Homes: Getting to Zero in Heating Costs

The house taking shape on the property of Kim and Mike Martin, both 鈥94 grads, in Greencastle, Pennsylvania, was largely inspired by the couple鈥檚 service term with Mennonite Central Committee in Mexico. Living in a society with a material standard of living far below that of the US middle-class has shaped many lifestyle decisions they鈥檝e

Going Global: Sustainable Living and Learning

For decades, environmental sustainability across the world has been a focus of 黑料正能量 alumni working in international development, usually working with Mennonite Central Committee (MCC). In recent years, many people linked to 黑料正能量 鈥 alumni, staff and faculty 鈥 have answered MCC鈥檚 call to reverse the degradation of God鈥檚 creation, encompassing land, sky and seas.

Flexibilty Helps Thinking Outside the Barn

The fact that Paul 鈥79 and Shirley 鈥80 Hoover had no background or experience in the dairy industry did little to stop them from entering the business in 1991. Neither did the fact that they had five children at home. And after two years in partnership with another couple, they struck out on their own,

Close to the soil: Eight Links to Earth鈥檚 Bounty

These eight examples in three states show the range of agricultural work in which alumni are engaged 鈥 greenhouse operations, raising meat and poultry, dairy farming, marketing of produce, working the land as a form of rehabilitation. Dawn 鈥91 and Troy (class of 鈥92) Alderfer raise corn, soybeans and wheat, dairy heifers and about 56,000

It Takes A Farm To Raise a Village

The latest improvement at Village Acres Farm in Mifflintown, Pennsylvania, is a new kitchen and education center where Hope and Roy L. Brubaker 鈥67 and plan to host cooking classes. They have been concerned lately about the health effects of poor diets. Maybe offering a crash course in cooking with fresh vegetables would be a

Innovative Entrepreneurs: Running In The Green

Sustainability can鈥檛 exist in a vacuum, says Nelson Longenecker 鈥78, the vice-president for business innovation at Four Seasons Produce in Ephrata, Pennsylvania. 鈥淔rom a business standpoint, it needs to be driven by what makes sense,鈥 he says. To that end, Nelson has worked to reduce his environmental footprint and operating costs with a variety of

Reduce, Reuse, Create: Where Frugality and Art Intersect

Andrea Stoner Leaman 鈥98 was finishing a master鈥檚 degree in social work at Temple University in 2009 when she first heard of 鈥淐reative Reuse Centers鈥 鈥 organizations that connect excess materials with 鈥渁nyone who can use them creatively.鈥 Though nearly 100 CRCs operate across the country, the only other one in Pennsylvania was in Pittsburgh.

Hockman-Wert Researches Fish Population, Habitat

Working for the federal government was not necessarily the dream job of Dave Hockman-Wert 鈥91 after graduate school, but, nine years ago, his roots sank into the Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center (FRESC) of Corvallis, and he has remained ever since. FRESC is part of the Biological Resources division of the federal science agency

Scientist Returns Home

Before his retirement, Paul S. Lehman 鈥63, PhD (plant pathology), spent decades as a government-employed research scientist, mainly focused on excluding pests and diseases through phytosanitary practices rather than by chemical means. Today, however, his research focuses on his backyard. Mary Ellen 鈥62 and Paul Lehman have retired to farmland in the Laurel Highlands of