Sincerely,
Us@sponsible.org
Christmas trees are recycled for five main types of large-scale uses for post-harvest trees. These are:
Today around 98 percent of real Christmas trees are grown on farms throughout all 50 states and Canada. Real trees are a renewable, recyclable resource, and real trees are planted to be harvested just as corn and/or pumpkins are cultivated for a harvest.
For each real Christmas tree harvested, up to three new seedlings are planted in its place, depending on farm size and current field rotation. Young trees in their rapid growth years have a high rate of photosynthesis and thus produce more oxygen than older trees.
This year, over 60 million new seedlings were planted by Christmas tree farmers all over North America.
You may know Jeff Corwin as the jovial host and executive producer of The Jeff Corwin Experience and Corwin's Quest, two of Animal Planet's more popular programs. Yet while he provides a good dose of intelligent entertainment for millions of viewers each week, he's also a pioneering conservationist, using television to inspire those same viewers to join his cause. And his cause is to protect animals, period.
Much like the late Steve Irwin, Corwin makes good use of his oversized personality to draw his audience in to subject matter with which they otherwise have no exposure. As Irwin's specialty was crocodiles, Irwin's is also cold-blooded animals – snakes in particular. Through his engaging style of education, which often includes a healthy smattering of movie lines, impressions and funny voices, he defuses the creepiest of crawlies and ultimately gains them countless human allies.
Outside of his own programs Corwin has spread the word of animal protection via pop culture magazines, including People (in which he was named one of its"50 Most Beautiful People" in 2002) and Entertainment Weekly. He's also appeared on the Today Show, Good Morning America, CBS Morning Show, Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Access Hollywood, Extra and Oprah, and in October 2003, Jeff made a guest appearance as himself on the popular television series CSI: Miami.
There are countless heroes in the world of animal protection, all deserving of recognition an support. We congratulate Jeff Corwin on his successful efforts to present his love for wildlife before a mainstream audience, work whose fruits will continue to ripen for years to come.
Rafe Esquith is one of those teacher you read about. Literally. He's been profiled in newspapers like the NY Times and Washington Post, magazines such as TIME and on radio and TV. And for good reason. The elementary school teacher's passion for teaching has resulted in extraordinary academic success for his students, 92% of whom come from low-income households in L.A.'s inner city.
As a fifth grade teacher at Hobart Boulevard Elementary School, the second-largest elementary school in the U.S., Esquith has rewritten the book on teaching, also literally, with There Are No Shortcuts and Teach Like Your Hair's on Fire. His teaching honors include the 1992 Disney National Outstanding Teacher of the Year Award, a Sigma Beta Delta Fellowship from Johns Hopkins University, Oprah Winfrey’s $100,000 Use Your Life Award, Parents Magazine’s As You Grow Award, National Medal of Arts, and Esquith was made an honorary Member of the Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth.
Thanks to his motivational techniques, Esquith's students consistently score in the top 5% to 10% of the country in standardized tests. Many of them voluntarily come to class as early as 6:30am, more than two hours before the official start of the school day. Most of his students come from immigrant Central American and Korean families and are learning English as a second language. They volunteer to come early, work through recess and stay as late as 5:30 pm, also coming to class during vacations and holidays.
We congratulate Rafe Esquith on his excellence. So many teachers, when faced with extraordinary challenges, throw up their hands and continue forging ahead under less than ideal circumstances, hoping for the best. Rafe has decided to forge ahead as well, but while accepting nothing less than the best from his students, and getting it.
… The Musharaf government has declared martial law to settle scores with lawyers and judges. While the terrorists remain on the loose and continue to occupy more space in Pakistan, senior lawyers are being tortured ...
WASHINGTON -- Congress by a wide margin approved the first increase in automobile fuel economy in 32 years Tuesday, and President Bush has signaled he will accept the mandates on the auto industry.
The energy bill, boosting mileage by 40% to 35 miles per gallon, passed the House 314-100 and now goes to the White House, following the Senate's approved last week.
In a dramatic shift to spur increased demand for nonfossil fuels, the bill also requires a sixfold increase in ethanol use to 36 billion gallons a year by 2022, a boon to farmers. And it requires new energy efficiency standards for an array of appliances, lighting and commercial and government buildings.
"This is a choice between yesterday and tomorrow" on energy policy, declared House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.), who was closely involved in crafting the legislation. "It's groundbreaking in what it will do."
While some GOP lawmakers criticized the bill for failing to address the need for more domestic oil and natural gas production, 95 GOP lawmakers joined Democrats in support of the bill.
"This legislation is a historic turning point in energy policy," said Majority Leader Steny Hoyer of Maryland because it will cut demand for foreign oil and promote nonfossil fuels that will cut greenhouse gases linked to global warming.
It increases energy efficiency "from light bulbs to light trucks," said Rep. John Dingell (D., Mich.), a longtime protector of the auto industry who was key to a compromise on vehicle efficiency increases.
Copyright © 2007 Associated Press
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