Kyle Goranson, 11, works on his grocery bag art project Wednesday at Hoover Elementary School in Mason City. Paper bags decorated by Kyle and other fifth-grade students will be returned to Hy-Vee and Fareway grocery stores for use by shoppers on Friday, the 35th anniversary of Earth Day. DICK JOHNSON/The Globe Gazette
"I've noticed too many people litter," the Hoover Elementary School fifth-grader said Wednesday. "I think they should go clean it up right away."
Kyle, 11, was among students decorating brown paper grocery bags with colorful, earth-friendly messages in three fifth-grade classrooms at Hoover. Mason City students in kindergarten through fifth grade are participating.
The bags can be used and re-used by shoppers at Mason City's Hy-Vee stores and at Fareway starting today.
The project leads up to Mason City's annual Earth Day celebration on Saturday, April 30, in Central Park. Friday is the 35th anniversary of Earth Day.
"It's a neat idea," said Kaitlyn Younker, 10, who divided her paper bag into two sections: what's good (trees, oceans and animals) and what's bad (litter, pollution and loss of animal habitat) for the earth. "I like just coming to school and making things for people, to see how good it is to keep our earth clean."
Schisel said it's important for the students to be educated on earth stewardship issues.
"And they really enjoy doing these kinds of projects — also going outside and cleaning up the area (an outdoor classroom near the school). They have a lot of fun," she said. "And I think that extends, then, into their own life and home, and hopefully can extend into their family and help them use the same kind of concepts."
Quiet, thoughtful Kyle created a drawing of the earth surrounded by trees and bushes and the message, "reduce, re-use, recycle" for his paper bag.
"Since so many people buy groceries, they might just get the point," he said. "Stop littering and save the earth."
For more on Earth Day activities, visit www.earthdaynorthiowa.org.
Building tour set for Earth Day
MASON CITY — Architect Tom Hurd of Spatial Designs Architects in Mason City will offer free tours of his building to celebrate the 35th Anniversary of Earth Day.
Tours will be held at 1:30 and 3:30 p.m. Friday — National Earth Day. More tours will be added if necessary.
Hurd's 3,000-square-foot office is powered almost entirely by a hybrid solar and wind system. It features a 10,000-gallon retention pond to control rain runoff from the roof and provide natural cooling; a 40-foot wind turbine (three more will be added eventually); 16 solar panels; a tornado-safe shelter boardroom; a grass-paved parking lot; low-energy lighting and plumbing fixtures and several other environmentally-friendly features.
Hurd said the building consumes two-thirds less energy than a typical office of the same size.
Spatial Designs Architects is located at 524 Village Green Drive S.W. (behind Fazoli's). For more information on the tours, call (641) 423-6395, or visit the Web site at www.spatialdesigns.com.
Reach Dick Johnson at 421-0556 or dick.johnson@globegazette.com.





