Education
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Global-Warming Teach-In
Published on Wednesday, January 30 On Thursday, January 31, Caltech will join more than 1,100 universities across the country for an unprecedented teach-in organized by Focus the Nation. Among the coordinators for Caltech's participation are graduate students Morgan Putnam and Asa Hopkins and undergraduate Aryan Safaie. Hopkins was inspired to host the event after hearing a speech by Focus the Nation project director Eban Goodstein at a campus sustainability conference at UC Santa Barbara last summer. Goodstein is an economics professor at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, OR, who took a two-year hiatus from teaching to champion this cause. At lunchtime on January 31, the Caltech chapter of the Engineers for a Sustainable World invites the campus and community to join the Focus the Nation effort with an angle on food choices. They will provide fliers to inform lunchtime patrons at Chandler Dining Hall about where their food originates, the energy it takes to provide the meals, the environmental consequences of growing and buying food, and suggestions for minimizing impact. Among other options, diners can select locally-caught fish topped with a salsa concocted from grapefruit from the backyard of Caltech president Jean-Lou Chameau and California-grown kiwi and blood oranges, with a side of California-grown broccoli and cauliflower. The event organizers will also sponsor a contest that quizzes consumers about energy-related food choices. Which is the most energy-efficient option: a cardboard pizza box, a porcelain plate, or a compostable plate? The winner scores free pizza for a week. "Focus the Nation gives us a coordinated chance to broaden the conversation at Caltech. Often we're very research focused, and that's good, but we also need to remember that our actions outside of the lab matter, too," comments Hopkins. The teach-in actually kicks off on the evening of January 30 with a live, interactive webcast of "The 2% Solution", in which climate scientists and experts in related fields will discuss global-warming solutions and tackle viewers' questions. The title of the webcast reflects the idea that developed countries must cut roughly two percent of their current emissions per year in order to arrest global warming at an ultimate minimum of around four degrees Farenheit. To view the webcast and for more information on Focus the Nation, visit www.focusthenation.org. |
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