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1.      Berkeley Public Health Alliance (BPHA) 3/7/ 6 pm
2.      $100,000 for UCB students' big ideas
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Berkeley Public Health Alliance (BPHA), Cal Nutrition Outreach, and 
FSM Educational Program Series, UC Berkeley Library present:

Free Speech Movement Cafe Public Forum
Marion Nestle
Food, Free Speech, and Obesity in America

   Obesity has become the leading nutrition problem in the United States and
  elsewhere, not least because of changes in society--food marketing among
  them--that promote overeating and sedentary lifestyles. Attempts to curb
  food marketing, especially the kind aimed at children, run up against
  arguments that such advertising is protected by the First Amendment. Should
  it be? Does Freedom of Speech apply to selling junk food to children? This
  presentation will address such issues.

Location:  Free Speech Movement (FSM) Cafe at Moffitt Library
Date:  Tues, March 7, 2006
Time: 6pm - 8pm

Snacks and Beverages from 6:00-6:30, Program begin at 6:30
Admission is free.  Seating is limited, so arrive on-time.

About Marion Nestle: Marion Nestle is the Paulette Goddard Professor 
of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health at New York University, 
in the department that she chaired from 1988 through 2003. Her 
degrees include a Ph.D. in molecular biology and an M.P.H. in public 
health nutrition, both from the University of California, Berkeley. 
Her research focuses on analysis of the scientific, social, cultural, 
and economic factors that influence the development, implementation, 
and acceptance of federal dietary guidance policies. She is the 
author of Food Politics: How the Food Industry Influences Nutrition 
and Health (University of California Press, 2002) and Safe Food: 
Bacteria, Biotechnology, and Bioterrorism (University of California 
Press, 2003), and is co-editor of Taking Sides: Clashing Views on 
Controversial Issues in Food and Nutrition (McGraw-Hill/Dushkin, 
2004).

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Dear MCBers,

This is an article that I found on line today that you might be
interested in. The relevant web site is
http://bigideas.berkeley.edu/index.html

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UC Berkeley: $100,000 competition for Cal students' best ideas

By Robert Sanders, Medial Relations | 01 March 2006

BERKELEY - Banking on the fact that students are often as creative
and impassioned as their professors, a group at the University of
California, Berkeley, has put up more than $100,000 for a competition
to find and fund students' best ideas.

Called "Bears Breaking Boundaries," the competition is being funded by the
Big [EMAIL PROTECTED] initiative in conjunction with the student
government - UC Berkeley's chapter of the Associated Students of the
University of California (ASUC) -and numerous institutes and research
centers across campus.

"Berkeley students have big ideas," said Thomas Kalil, special
assistant to the chancellor for science and technology and head of
Big Ideas. "I hope that this competition encourages Berkeley students
to put their ideas on paper, so that the campus can mobilize
additional resources to support them."

According to Kalil, the competition seeks creative ideas in a broad
range of subjects such as curricular innovation, green cities,
neglected diseases, clean energy, information technology for society,
social entrepreneurship, science and technology policy, serious
games, improving Lower Sproul Plaza, and designing the next "X Prize"
- a $10 million private prize, announced in 1996 and claimed in 2004,
that launched the first private race into space.

The competition is open to both undergraduate and graduate students,
who will be able to use the cash prizes as scholarships or to advance
their ideas. Multidisciplinary teams are strongly encouraged but not
required.

"ASUC is delighted to be co-sponsoring Bears Breaking Boundaries,"
said student leader Inga Lin, deputy director of campus affairs for
the ASUC's Office of the Executive Vice President. "Cal students are
entrepreneurial and want to change the world, and this contest will
give them the platform to do so."

Kalil has already seen how imaginative, energetic and dedicated UC
Berkeley students can be. In a similar competition last year that was
sponsored by the School of Public Health's Center for
Entrepreneurship in International Health and Development, five of 14
submissions were deemed worthy of support and are now receiving seed
funding. Among these is a student proposal to create a center for
safe drinking water and sanitation, leveraging UC Berkeley's
expertise in inexpensive water treatment technologies such as one
using ultraviolet light to kill germs.

Big Ideas is currently supporting more than 20 student projects in
areas such as public policy, global public health, developing country
access to essential medicines, and entrepreneurship in clean energy,
biotechnology and nanotechnology.

Kalil says the overall goals of the competition are to:

*Provide concrete support, such as money, advice or other resources,
for creative, high-quality student proposals

*Encourage UC Berkeley students to set ambitious goals for their
current and future endeavors

*Increase the role that UC Berkeley students play in shaping the next
generation of research, education and service activities on campus

*Encourage the innovation and fresh thinking that often arises from
multidisciplinary student teams

Organizations involved in Bears Breaking Boundaries as either hosts
or financial sponsors of one or more of the contests are the ASUC,
Big [EMAIL PROTECTED], vice chancellor for research, Center for
Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society (CITRIS),
Berkeley Institute of the Environment, Center for Neglected Diseases,
Center for New Media, Center for Responsible Business, and Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory.

Initial funding for Big Ideas @ Berkeley was provided by the Omidyar
Network, an investment group created by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar.
Additional funding has been provided by the College of Engineering,
CITRIS, vice chancellor for research, UC Berkeley's School of Law
(Boalt Hall), and the venture capital firm Sevin Rosen.
-- 
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Anne Aaboe                               phone:  (510) 643-7473
Undergraduate Advising Manager                          fax:  (510) 643-2208
Molecular & Cell Biology                          email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
2083 Valley Life Sciences, #3200        web:  mcb.berkeley.edu/undergrad
Berkeley, CA 94720
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