Showing posts with label Kokomo Tribune. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kokomo Tribune. Show all posts

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Northwestern High School Educates Students About New Wind Turbine

 

I put this article up because I thought Adrienne might be interested in it. The article didn’t answer  the question of the bats. It didn’t mention about the turbines exploding. I will mention that Northwestern High School has one of these on their property. You might be interested in the video of the teacher Mr. David Inskeep singing about the turbines.

Northwestern educates students about new wind turbine by Lindsey Ziliak, Kokomo Tribune

Northwestern High School biology teacher David Inskeep strummed his guitar Friday and sang about stuffy, old tigers and fighting wind turbines.

“I just want to be a fighting turbine,” he crooned. “I’m going to spin with my nose in the wind. I go around and come around again.”

He proposed in his song that the school ditch their “stuffy, old tiger” mascot and become a fighting turbine instead.

Students laughed, clapped, cheered and sang along to his fight song.
The performance kicked off a community wind celebration Friday afternoon at the high school to educate students on the school district’s newly installed wind turbine.

“I’d had a lot of questions from students [about the turbine],” said Al Remaly, Northwestern High School principal. “They asked how tall it was and how big it was. A lot of them saw it go up, but they didn’t understand what went into building it.”

So the school partnered with Performance Services and Native Energy to bring the students a lesson on clean energy.

The companies constructed Northwestern’s turbine and turbines at North Newton and West Central schools.

It was the first time they taught students, though.

 

Tony Kuykendall, business development manager at Performance Services, talked about the wind energy study done in Kokomo.

The area has wind speeds of 6.8 meters per second or 15 mph, the third highest in the state, Kuykendall said.

He said the district could save up to $7 million over the turbine’s 25-year lifespan.

But Northwestern had to be concerned about environmental impacts of their project.

“The wind turbine has to be controlled in certain months to protect Indiana bats,” he told the students.

The district looked at whether it would cast shadows on or create noise problems for homes in the area.

Kuykendall flashed graphs across a projector in the auditorium indicating that neither should be an issue.

Nearby houses shouldn’t have shadows cast on them more than 24 hours per year, Kuykendall said. And the noise in the area shouldn’t reach above 45 decibels, the equivalent of a refrigerator running.

“That’s not very loud,” Kuykendall said.

Pete Beiriger, senior energy engineer at Performance Services, quizzed the students on the turbine’s construction.

Kids yelled out answers to questions as they fought for prizes like water bottles and energy bars.

He asked them how much the turbine weighs in cars.

One student correctly guessed that it was 100 cars or 150 tons.
Others looked shocked.

Students got prizes for knowing that it took eight semis to deliver crane parts to the construction site and that 200 houses could be powered by the turbine. No one guessed that the turbine’s foundation weighs 2.64 million pounds.

“Your foundation is the biggest,” Beiriger said.

The wind energy lessons continued after the companies left Friday.
Several seventh-period classes had activities of their own planned.
Inskeep’s biology class was developing a hypothetical wind farm operation that reduces bat mortality.

Students worked in groups of four to develop a schedule of when to turn the turbines on and off based on the patterns of bats in the area.

“How will your plan protect the bats?” Inskeep asked the students. “How will it be profitable?”

A few doors down, an integrated chemistry and physics class built wind turbines.

Junior Brandon Alexander built his blades out of cardboard wrapped in duct tape.

“We’ve tried a lot of different designs,” he said. “If the cardboard doesn’t work, we’ll try something lighter.”

He and his partner tested out their turbine by sitting it in front of a fan.
They waited a few seconds before breathing a sigh of relief that the turbine was holding up.

They hooked it up to a tool that measured how much energy they were creating. It was enough to operate a small motor.

Kuykendall was surprised at how well their outreach efforts worked.

“This started out as something small and grew from there,” he said. “It’s been a lot of fun. The students are engaged.”

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Don’t Believe The Lies They Tell

 

This was one of the Letters to the Editor of the Kokomo Tribune. Sandra Pohlman states what a lot us think.

Don’t believe the lies they tell by Sandra Pohlman, Galveston

A nation can survive its fools and even the ambitious, but it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gate is less formidable, for he is known and carries his banners openly against the city, but a traitor moves among those within the gates freely. His sly whispers rustling through all alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself. For the traitor appears no traitor. He appeals to the baseness of lies deep in the hearts of all men. He rots the sole of a nation; he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of a city, or a nation; he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist.

A nation, our nation, will be taken down by our own government by the traitors within.

We the people stand up for nothing. We believe the lies and we don’t stand up for the truth.

When it comes time to vote or anything else in life, stand up for the truth that is there, search for it, live your life with what is the truth. Don’t live the lies that live within us daily.

Friday, September 28, 2012

I Missed This Indiana Marine Lance Cpl. Zach Nelson. He Is Recovering From His Injuries

 

Local Marine recovering from injuries by By Lindsey Ziliak, Kokomo Tribune

On July 5, 20-year-old Lance Cpl. Zach Nelson was searching for improvised explosive devices in Afghanistan when the mine detection vehicle he was in hit a boulder in the road and flipped “violently.”

“They had been down this path many, many times,” his mother, Melinda Nelson of Kokomo said on a recent afternoon. “There were never any boulders there before.”

Family friend Jim Irwin said insurgents had put the rock there. It was flanked by IEDs on either side.

The vehicle’s driver had no choice but to go over the boulder.
Irwin said Lance Cpl. Nelson was in the most vulnerable spot in the vehicle. He was the gunner. He was standing up outside the vehicle and facing backward.

“He couldn’t even see it coming,” Irwin said.

When the vehicle started to roll, Nelson’s fellow Marines tried to pull him inside to protect him, but he still took the brunt of the impact, his mother said.

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Marine Sgt. Atwell's Body Has Arrived At Grissom

 

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Marine Sgt. Atwell's body has arrived at Grissom by Kokomo Tribune

Kokomo — Marine Sgt. Bradley Atwell's body has arrived at Grissom Air Reserve Base. The procession to Kokomo will begin soon.

The official route of the funeral procession was released earlier today. It is as follows: It will leave Grissom Air Reserve Base between 10:30 and 10:45 a.m. and head south on U.S. 31. It will proceed to Center Road, where it will head east to Taylor High School, where it will take a brief pause. It will then head south on 400 East to Ind. 26, where it will then head west to Dixon Road. From there, it will turn onto Alto Road and end at Chapel Hill Church.

For continued photo updates, check out our Facebook page here.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Indiana’s Apple Crops Are Not Doing Too Hot

  

With early frost and drought the apple crops aren’t  doing to good.

Early frost causes worst apple harvest since 1930s by Carson Gerber, Kokomo Tribune

PERU — Jason McClure drives down row after row of barren, empty trees on his family’s apple orchard in northern Miami County.
At this time of year, the more than 5,000 trees at McClure’s Orchard and Winery should be heavy with fruit ready for harvest. Instead, there’s only dry branches.
Finally, McClure finds a tree with a handful of small, cracked golden delicious apples.
“That tree should be loaded down right now,” he said.
Even though there’s hardly any apples on the tree, he called it an “anomaly” within a devastated orchard that has produced the worst apple crop in recent memory.
The devastation started back in March, when unusually warm weather lured buds to open a month earlier than normal. Then in late April, two nights of deadly 26-degree temperatures frosted the trees, wiping out virtually every budding apple in the orchard.
“It was a total decimation,” he said. “A lot of people think the apples were lost in the drought, but the drought really didn’t affect this crop. We didn’t have any apples to herd even before the dry weather hit.”
But he said the hot, dry summer took its own toll. The few apples that did manage to grow were small and stunted. When rain finally fell earlier this month, McClure said the apples couldn’t handle the excess moisture and cracked open.

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