Word: recyclemania
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Several other inter-collegiate sustainability efforts have also triggered awareness and competition. Harvard currently ranks third in a ranking of 400 colleges and universities for cumulative recycling, according to the RecycleMania competition...
...award was officially delivered at a ceremony held Tuesday at 46 Blackstone Street, the office of University Operations Services where Gogan works. Last November, The Crimson reported that the Environmental Protection Agency ranked Harvard as the top paper recycler in the agency’s Recyclemania competition, which includes 93 schools in 33 states...
...that now sits on the Web site for the Yale Student Taskforce for Environmental Partnership. It’s understandable that Yalies would go to such lengths to taunt fair Harvard. Since last May, they’ve had yet another insecurity to compensate for: in the 2006 RecycleMania, a nationwide intercollegiate waste reduction competition, Harvard trounced Yale in five of six recycling categories. Now, five weeks into the 2007 recycling competition, Yale trails us once again. This year, RecycleMania offers eight categories, and Harvard leads in six. But despite our stellar performance so far, the competition won?...
...universities nationwide. Last month, Harvard recovered a record 38.64 tons of bottles and cans, the University’s supervisor of waste management, Robert M. Gogan, said yesterday. The Environmental Protection Agency last month also ranked Harvard as the top paper recycler in the agency’s Recyclemania competition, which includes 93 schools in 33 states, according to Recyclemania’s Web site. Harvard recycled 36.41 pounds of paper per person in the competition, which lasted 10 weeks at the beginning of the calendar year. Harvard saved nearly 25 percent more paper than the second-place finisher, Emory...
Crimson readers have been throwing their copies of the paper into the right place, the recycling bin—no doubt after reading them thoroughly—according to the results of the sixth annual Recyclemania competition. Harvard placed first out of 62 colleges in the contest’s paper recycling category. Residents within our ivied walls each recycled 36.41 pounds of paper on average. And overall, the University had a per capita recycling mass of 40.82 pounds, putting Harvard in seventh place in the “Per Capita Classic” part of the competition...
| 1 |