|
|
‘Going Green’ Winners Announced at Alternatives Blackstone Valley Tribune Friday, July 4, 2008 The winners of the “Going Green in the Blackstone Valley” poster contest were honored recently at a
ceremony at Alternatives’ Whitin Mill in Whitinsville.
The competition had challenged Valley middle school students to
create a poster that spoke to environmental concerns and awareness.
It was sponsored by Alternatives, the Blackstone Valley Chamber of
Commerce Education Foundation and
ValleyCAST. Fifteen posters were chosen as finalists and were displayed
in Alternatives’ Red Brick Mill.
From those 15 posters, judges chose first and second place winners
and the public viewing the exhibition chose a People’s Choice
Award. First place prize of $250 went to the team of Alexandra Driscoll,
Samantha Prescott and Elizabeth Carse from Northbridge Middle
School for their poster, “Going Green in the Blackstone Valley.”
The second place prize of $200 went to the team of Emily Teixeira,
Lauren Welcome and Alex LeMay of Assumption School for their
poster “Operation Green.”
The People’s Choice Award and the prize of $300 also went to Assumption
School for the “Clean Energy” poster created by Lauren
LaRusso.
Whitin Middle School and Molly Wallace received an honorable
mention for the “Think Green” poster. All prize money was awarded
directly to the schools. Each participating
student who worked on the 15 finalist posters received a $50 US
Savings Bond.
In announcing the winners, Dennis Rice, executive director of Alternatives,
said, “As part of our taking a leadership role in the environmental
concerns in the Valley, we want to get young people thinking about the future. We’re going to make this an annual event and
hope to have even more schools involved next year.”
Joanne Holahan, a sixth-grade science teacher at Assumption School in Millbury, offered that the students learned more than something
about ecology.
“They learned about collaboration with different organizations, disparate groups and how to come together for one exciting project,”
she said.
Alexandra Driscoll, who worked on the first place poster, said she learned a lot about the condition of the Blackstone River but also
that, “You can do something about it if you put your mind to it. If you don’t, it will only get worse.”
The exhibition will be on display at River Bend Farm in Uxbridge for the summer
|