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blank image President's Officeblank image>blank imageBates Contemplates Food
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How are our food choices important?
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Once upon a time, all it took to make a meal was a simple interaction with nature: People hunted animals and gathered plants to eat.

Things are much different now. Your dinner is the likely product of systems that involve transportation, energy policy, economics, the environment and politics, as well as chemical or biological intervention and myriad other industrial processes.

So the food choices that you make can have real impacts that reach well beyond your kitchen, wallet or dining room.

Seeking ways to harmonize agricultural needs, means and methods for the best possible outcome
An edited transcript of Pollan's Oct. 27 Otis Lecture at Bates.
Local and natural/organic foods are healthier for the people who eat them, for the community, and for the planet.
Meals made lovingly from good ingredients and taken in good company nourish the body, mind and soul.
An excerpt from a conversation with President Elaine Tuttle Hansen.
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