Environmental Club: Blog
Thursday November 08th 2007, 9:03 am
Filed under:
General
Parallel to this blog, the official blog of the environmental club of Randolph College has been launched.
Stay tuned with the events going on inside and outside the campus, catch up environmental and world news, read some stories about the Reading University experience, and listen to different style of music while surfing on the blog.
A concentration of info on 1 page, to win some time on your schedule. Internet has never been so useful.
http://randolphthegreen.hw.tc
Randolph W. the Green, in the Human World, Thinks of Changes.
Day 2

Hello once again from Power Shift 2007!
Saturday turned out to be even more exciting than we originally expected. In fact, we did so much that we are quite exhausted, so we’ll keep tonight’s blog quite short. After a quick breakfast at the hotel, we were off to attend panel discussions. There were dozens of different panels today in many different areas dealing with climate change, including science, politics, economics, social justice, faith, the media and careers. I particularly enjoyed Ralph Nader’s presentation on global warming and progressive politics. At noon, all of us from Randolph College were fortunate to be invited to a luncheon with the National Wildlife Federation, where we were pleased and honored to sit next to Mr. Thomas G. Gonzales, Chair of the NWF Board of Trustees. The third panel presented an eye-opening discussion on “Rainforest Agribusiness, Community Struggle and Biofuels: Testimonies from the Global South.” State and regional break-out groups followed. In the Virginia session, we learned about regional environmental challenges where we can make a difference; e.g., movements to stop mountain top removal in seven locations in the Commonwealth and to stop Dominion Power’s plans to build a coal power plant in Wise. At the start of the evening, we sat in on a book session that focused on changing the language of being green to encourage participation by business persons as well as environmental activists. All the power shifters returned to the main stadium to listen to Saturday’s keynote speakers and enjoy musical entertainment. On a serious note, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s speech was hugely popular. On the lighter side, more than a thousand students flooded onto the ground floor of the arena to spontaneously start dancing to various musical groups, such as a wonderful banjo performance.
Day 2
Saturday November 03rd 2007, 10:37 pm
Filed under:
General
Day 2
What we experienced today was just beyond our expectations.
After a quick breakfast, we arrived at the university around 8h30am, without realizing that we were going to stay there for more than 10h in a row.
Three panels consisting of 25 different sessions for each, speakers including Attorney General Doug Gansler and Ralph Nader, students more than motivated, and effective calls for action created an unbelievable amount of energy and excitement.We had the incredible opportunity to have a lunch organized by the NWF (National Wildlife Federation) consisting of 5 or 6 tables of 9 people including environmentally active students from around the country, representing colleges like UT, Harvard, Alaska, Princeton,… with our group of 7 students from Randolph College representing the bigger group there. Yay! We were sat with Thomas Gonzales, chairman of the board of directors of the NWF! Simply awesome (and the food was delicious!).We also participated to the State and Regional Breakouts, where Gillian represented our college (as one student did for each college from Virginia present there) by exposing what we already realized and what we are going to do for the campus sustainability.We were also able to assist to one open discussion organized by Michael Shellenberger and Ted Nordhaus, authors of Break Through: From the Death of Environmentalism to the Politics of Possibility, where we got free food and assisted to a passionate exchange of ideas including the concept to move the world toward a huge investment in alternative and renewable energies and how to make a difference in this domain.During the evening, we finally listened to a couple of great activists like Jessy Tolkan, Judy Bonds, Evon Peter, Paul Loeb, but also Bill McKibben, and the surprise of this Power Shift 2007: the speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi! Just a concentration of powerful people, motivated students, and refreshing musical groups.Today was intense, today allowed the sensitization of a lot of people toward a sustainable way of thinking, and it was, I believe and I’m glad of, a day of inspiration for some persons of our group.I’m extremely pleased to participate to this historical coalition.
Ludovic
1st Day
Hello from Power Shift 2007!
After a long, scenic road trip through the beautiful Appalachian Mountains, we arrived at College Park, Maryland. We wasted no time in the hotel and headed off to the University of Maryland to check into Power Shift 2007. Even though Friday night’s scheduled activities lasted only three hours, they were full of exciting keynote speeches. We heard from speakers with varied backgrounds in environmental activism, from urban areas like Brooklyn, New York to rural areas of the Chesapeake Bay and everywhere in between. It was a wonderful opportunity to meet with other college students from across the nation who are just as enthusiastic about climate change as we are. Tonight’s program was capped off with an environmentally focused musician who was able to get all of us 5,500 college students on our feet and join in on the fun. After the end of tonight’s program, we had a late dinner at an IHOP. The dinner conversation was dominated by talk about tomorrow’s schedule, which if it turns out to be like tonight, will be an action packed day to remember.
1st Day
Friday November 02nd 2007, 9:06 pm
Filed under:
General
Hello everyone!
Here we are, after more than 4h30 of car (yep, traffic jam around DC…), we finally arrived at College Park.
We quickly checked in at the Days Inn where we will sleep this week-end before heading toward the Power Shift center at the University of Maryland.
The student body organizing this event was simply very welcoming and well organized. In less than 10 minutes, each of us got a great T-shirt, several information magazines, a nice bag, a name tag, and an entry to the main room where the first presentation was going on. It was really a motivating speech to start this week-end with a lot of energy!
We missed a part because of the time lost on the road, but it was still a very enjoyable evening.
After a stop at IHOP, we went back to our room to have a good night of sleep before tomorrow.
And then, Power Shift 2007 will really begin
LuDo
Find more about Power Shift 2007 and other environmental events at http://randolphthegreen.hw.tc