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University
of Saskatchewan Students are organizing a book collection drive to
collect books and computers from U of S students and faculty. The
collected items will be donated to HELP International who will ship
them to Kenya as part of HELP's Books and Computers for Africa project.
The project assists in setting up schools and community libraries in
the slums of Nairobi, Kenya.
This
books collection drive is being led by Berverly Wudel, a student in the
College of Pharmacy & Nutrition at the U. of S. The books will be
shipped to HELP's Weyburn office by Jays' Moving who have been very
generous and have been delivery books to Weyburn from as far as Meadow
Lake, Saskatchewan.
HELP International welcomes four Katimavik volunteers
The four volunteers are Trevor Dumont, Elizabeth Avingaq, Eve Boulay, and Kira Larsen.
The
volunteers will be assisting in various capacities. They will be
attached to various projects that HELP international is running.
Currently, they are working on the books and computers for Africa project.
They are helping with sorting out and arranging books that are donated
to the project for shipment to Africa. The books are part of HELP
International’s effort to establish more community and school libraries
in the slums of Nairobi Kenya.
The four volunteers are very
enthusiastic and they demonstrate an unprecedented level of
responsibility and commitment. HELP International is very grateful to
have these young people here.
To find out more about Katimavik, please visit their website at www.katimavik.org

December 04, 2004 edition of Weyburn This Week

HELP
International representative Kabuya Muepu and S.E. Regional College
representative Trent Jordens and the college’s welding class accept the
challenge of inventing a new hydraulic press system for fibre board
manufacturing.
— Photo by Bob Heath
South East Regional College’s Trent Jordens, along with HELP International’s
Kabuya Muepu, have started a partnership that will be felt around the world.
S.E. College welding students have been challenged to come up with a
better hydraulic press system to assist with filter board presses. The
current presses are the weight of the operator pressing down on a
slurry of recycled newspaper, water and cloth strips. The size of
boards are limited due to the human factor but with a hydraulic press
system the dimensions can be increased dramatically. Kabuya told the
gathering that the fibre board has just won an award for innovation in
recycling in Nairobi, Kenya. HELP International would like to see the
fibre boards increased to four by eight foot sheets. This would give a
better application in the construction industry. Mr. Jordens of the
S.E. College said, “This is why we’re taking on this project.” Jordens
went on to say that this partnership with HELP is a great model of how
local training and education not only impacts our local area but
globally as well. This will be a great experience for our students
which allows freedom of creativity, ingenuity and internal motivation.
HELP International currently is making two inch square fibre boards
which take up to five days to finish but they are counting on the local
college students to reduce the curing time and increase the dimensions
at the same time.The students will also be creating
a new motor driven papermill which will create a paper/pulp slurry for the recycled
pulp/fibre board process. The emphasis is on low cost and low technology which will
be used by 10 women led home associations in Kenya whose individual household
incomes range from $30 to $100 per month. The Zero Waste Project is
beginning in the slums of Kenya’s largest cities due to the large amounts of sewer
wastes and household garbage entering their rivers. Waste management is becoming
a top priority in Kenya and with Weyburn’s assistance this project will
help reduce pollution around the world. The projects will be unveiled in
January 2005 at the SouthEast Community College.S.E. College assists HELP International







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HELP International 2008 |
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