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Find fun stuff in the ODE Classifieds: Comics, your daily horoscope, and, of course, the crossword.
Street Faire emphasizes
reducing waste, recycling
The fair's student-initiated
recycling program made
bins and stations easily
accessible for fair-goers
By Steven Neuman
News Reporter
The 2004 ASUO's Spring Street Faire
boasts about 25 food vendors this year,
all of them chopping, frying, grilling,
toasting, mixing, sauteing and finally
serving up thousands of meals to the
delight of community members, Uni
versity students, faculty and staff.
Ihe Street Faire, which should accu
mulate much garbage, offers recycling
as the only option and dramatically
cuts the amount of waste.
"We work with the recycling and
garbage facilities, and we have all the
garbage cans covered with plastic bags
so that you can't put trash in them, you
have to go to a recycling station," Street
Faire Coordinator Diana Aguilar said.
University Recycling Program Man
ager Karyn Kaplan said the fair offers
students the opportunity to recycle
many types of materials, including
compostables such as food, paper
products, and bottles and cans.
Two main recycling stations are lo
cated at both ends of the fair, and small
er stations are scattered throughout for
convenience to fair-goers, Aguilar said.
"We've reduced the wastestream by
about 70 percent," Kaplan said. "It's
an effort towards zero waste, and that
can't be obtained until all materials
are compostable."
Ihe recycling program at the fair was
instated by students, Kaplan said. The
first "small effort" in 1998 offered only
material recycling and successfully
Tim Kupsick Photographer
VolunteerZachary Zakon helps sophomore Jessica Freedman (left) and junior Erin Baldwin
recycle food and plates at the ASUO Street Faire on Thursday.
reduced about 40 percent of the fair's
waste When compostables were added,
the waste dropped to the current level.
"Composting is the next horizon,"
Kaplan said. "We've worked with food
vendors to purchase 100 percent pa
per products."
Recycling station volunteer sopho
more Alice Wessling said the multiple
bins at the recycling station tend to
sometimes confuse fair-goers, adding
that they are still appreciative.
"But that's why I'm here," she said.
"Everybody says 'thanks for doing it.'
No one has been negative about it."
The food vendors, who also pro
duce waste, are bound by strict guide
lines and rules, Aguilar said.
"We have two big garbage bins and
that's the only place where the ven
dors can throw away their garbage
and everything else they have to put in
recycling," Aguilar said. "They can't
have any Styrofoam because you just
can't recycle that. They are doing a re
ally good job of complying."
Doug Ellingson and Yuen Lee, who
run the Noodles Delight booth, said
the recycling program is a good one,
yet is absent at many of the other
street fairs they've attended.
"They know their process," Elling
son said. "They give you two buckets;
when one gets full they come by and
take it away. It's simple. A lot of things
we would normally put into the
garbage we can put in there."
Kaplan said mobilizing the large num
bers of volunteers and workers to help
the effort is challenging but rewarding.
"It's a huge effort," she said. "But it's
really wonderful that we can all do
this. It's a really powerful thing be
cause it's a community effort."
Contact the business/science/
technology reporter
at stevenneuman@dailyemerald.com.
MUSEUM
continued from page 1
of fresh paint wafts through the emp
ty halls and rooms.
Museum Director David Turner
said the open house is an excellent
chance for people to see how the
building has changed.
"If people enjoy architecture and
how things are built, it will be a reve
lation of the scale and complexity of
this project," he said. "Architecture is a
work of art and we can see the archi
tecture process right now."
Jordan said people will be sta
tioned in the various gallery spaces to
explain what attendees can expect in
the fall with the museum's rededica
tion. The open house is the only op
portunity for the public to see the mu
seum's back rooms, which will close
when the works of art are moved in
for the fall.
The open house will also feature a
number of hands-on activities for at
tendees, including book-making and
an activity called "Create Your Own
Masterpiece for the Museum," in which
people of all ages will be given crayons,
paints and other materials to make
their own works of art. Also, for the first
275 attendees, there will be 4-by-4 inch
tiles available for painting. The painted
tiles will make up the backsplash for
sinks in the museum's studio. There
will also be a folk storytelling from
Japan, Korea and China in the Interac
tive Discovery Gallery space
"We use every opportunity we can to
have something fun to do," said
Tonkin. "We really want to reach out to
the University and want to build a good
relationship with University students."
The massive renovation project will
nearly double the size of the museum
and has cost approximately $14.4
million. The renovated museum will
include a proper loading dock and
nearly triple the storage space, which
will allow the museum to accommo
date more works, according to Public
Relations and Marketing Coordinator
Katie Sproles.
Jordan said the new museum will
also include "state-of-the-art climate
conditions throughout the museum
for the collection and for loan works."
Tire renovation will also add a lec
ture hall and a studio as part of the
museum's new educational suite. The
new museum will also include a cafe
— which will be run by local French
restaurant Marche — and an expand
ed museum store and special events
hall available for public rental.
The public can also look forward to
a number of substantial exhibits slat
ed for the museum's opening in the
fall. The first show will feature faculty
art from the University art department
and, in January, complete prints by
Andy Warhol will be shown. Turner
said the Warhol exhibit will give view
ers the opportunity to see complete
prints of "Marilyn (Monroe), Mao
(Zedong) and Mick (Jagger)."
In the spring, the University's mas
ters of fine arts candidates will show
their work, and the summer exhibit
will feature landscape photos of the
American West, including photos
from the famed photographer Ansel
Adams.
Turner encouraged the public to at
tend Saturday's open house.
"I really want our public to under
stand how we do things at the muse
um, so they should see how this mu
seum is getting built," he said.
Contact the people/culture/
faith reporter
at moriahbalingit@dailyemeraid.com.
When: Saturday, May 8.14 pm
What The Museum of Art will
host an open house with
refreshments and a number of
hands-on activities including tile
painting, bookmaking and a
“Create Your Own Masterpiece”
activity. Professional storyteller
Mona Parker will tell stories from
around the world and Museum
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