reynoldscohort: October 2008 Archives

Reynolds Fellow Launches Goodeater.org

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Reynolds Fellow Joshua Levin and professional chef and food critic Kengi Alt have launched Goodeater.org.

Goodeater.org merges conversations of food quality and enjoyment with food sourcing and sustainability. It's for the food lover interested in the complete perspective. 
Kenji Alt is a staff writer for Cook's Illustrated Magazine, the #1 cooking magazine in the country by circulation, and a weekly contributor of restaurant reviews and recipes to the Boston Globe, Edible Boston, and The Boston Phoenix.

How to participate:

  • Check www.goodeater.org every weekday morning for a fresh hot blog.
  • Post your comments!
  • Pass on www.goodeater.org to everyone you know who loves food and health!
  • Check the calendar for awesome food events coming up in New York and Boston.
  • (The Chocolate Festival, Picklefest, andBrewtopia are right around the corner!)
  • Sign up for our newsletter to receive new blog headlines (with link) by email.
  • Share your ideas, articles, organizations, etc. with us on our comments page.

I've checked it out and hope to try the recipe for the fried apple pie. Yum!

Globalizing the Crisis Response

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As Director of the Keep a Child Alive College Program, and simply as a young woman who considers herself a global citizen, I find myself subconsiously reconfiguring headlines and reading articles in terms of the AIDS pandemic.  You can imagine that the countless recent headlines of "world leaders coming together to solve crisis" have me furious -- knowing that leaders are CAPABLE of solving global crises, but prioritize immensely, for some, dishearteningly.

I am always looking for new, innovative ways to engage my generation in MEANINGFUL AIDS work -- that does NOT mean raising fists and shouting in anger about poverty, but actually doing something to assist those living with HIV or prevent the disease from further spreading. With Keep a Child Alive, I am privileged to coordinate a network of 227 campuses, and growing everyday, in the work of fundraising for lifesaving antiretroviral drugs that are delivered directly to those in most dire need.

I think it is immensely important for students to realize where their potential lies.  Most of the time, just shouting about an issue will make no progress - so why, when, how do we speak up effectively?  Some thoughts to consider, that I recently blogged about for a foreign policy course:

http://oldmole.typepad.com/us_foreign_policy_21/2008/10/globalizing-the.html

I choose one article in particular to sub-in AIDS for Finance, and conclude:

"I invite you to pick up a newspaper and try this exercise for yourself.  Replace the crisis and you will see that our world leadership is capable of coming together to take immediate and united action.  The difference to me is not that our leaders don't want to end AIDS, it's that there are no "jittery investors" who are pushing them to do so.  We are all affected by the health of global populations and like issues of climate change or education or human rights, we will not see the negative effects of failures to invest until the long run, and we therefore don't identify ourselves as investors now.  Which means politicians have no pressure to move in the direction of solving the foreign crises that already surround us.  If we want an end to AIDS that's up to us as investors in global public health, citizens who want to live in a healthy world.  It's totally possible to achieve, but the choice is ours!""

Reynolds Fellow Blogs on JustMeans

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by Lizzie Hetzer

Current Reynolds fellow, Theresa Newhard, shares her thoughts on democracy in the workplace and the WorldBlu LIVE conference on the JustMeans blog. 


About this Archive

This page is a archive of recent entries written by reynoldscohort in October 2008.

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