Here's the complete posting:
Michael Pollan, author of the book The Omnivore's Dilemma, selected
by the New York Times as one of the five best non-fiction books of
2006, teaches journalism at UC Berkeley. David Wood has a lot of money.
(See last paragraph.)--Tom
In a message dated 10/16/2010 11:27:18 A.M. Central Daylight Time,
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writes:
https://civileats.com/2010/10/14/the-troubled-waters-of-big-ags-academic-influence/
The
Troubled Waters of Big Ag's Academic Influence
EDITED
Last month,
the University of Minnesota caused a stir when it
postponed the release
of "Troubled Waters" - a film that focuses on
the effect agriculture is
having on U.S. waterways from Minnesota to
the Gulf of
Mexico.
The film's team had thoroughly fact-checked the film and
followed the
review process utilized by the PBS science program
NOVA.
Not long after the news broke that Troubled Waters was being
held up,
it came to light that VP of University Relations Karen Himle
was
behind the film's purgatory. This information was notable because
her
husband John Himle is president of Himle Horner, a public relations
firm that represents the Minnesota Agri-Growth Council, a group that
promotes both ethanol production and industrial agriculture
practices.
More troubling, Cargill - which is a key player in ethanol
production
- has its VP on the University of Minnesota's
board.
Controversies around agriculture at universities are not new,
but it
has become more frequent in recent years, as the public becomes
more
aware of food production methods and industrial agriculture groups
feel threatened by the pressure to change. Just last fall Michael
Pollan was scheduled to give a solo lecture at California Polytechnic
State University when Harris Ranch Beef Company Chairman David Wood
threatened to cut off $500,000 in funding to the university if he was
allowed to do so.
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