2 miles down, 98 miles to go!

Lexy’s a tired puppy after our first run together for the Tread on Trafficking campaign. Despite the multitude of stray dogs in the area, she made for a great running buddy.

Help support me to tread on trafficking!

Please help support me as I run to raise funds for the Tread on Trafficking campaign. This campaign directly supports Love146, a non-profit charity organization that works specifically on the prevention and aftercare of child trafficking. Please see their website (www.love146.org) or ask me for more details regarding this devastating form of 21st century slavery.

My goal is to run 100 miles during the next 8 weeks. With the help of my friends, family, and church, I intend to raise 25 cents per mile ($25 per person/group), and reach a minimum of $500 for this cause.

Your support is greatly needed, and greatly appreciated!

♥ Laurel

Follow This Link to visit my personal web page and help me in my efforts to support Love 146

My final design for Typography. One paper left, and then Spring ‘10 is donezo!!

My final design for Typography. One paper left, and then Spring ‘10 is donezo!!

By Melanie Warner | Mar 25, 2010

The back-to-back, double whammy announcements that PepsiCo (PEP) is ditching high fructose corn syrup in Gatorade along with the results of a scathing new study from researchers at Princeton make it official — allies of the controversial sweetener have lost the war.

For years, the Corn Refiners Association, a trade group consisting of companies like Cargill and ADM (ADM), has been hammering away at the bad press gushing out about high fructose corn syrup. In ads, in the press and online, they argue that the sweetener is a perfectly natural product and that it is no worse for you than regular old sugar.

To which consumers have responded with a collective “Yeah, right.” Con Agra (CAG) is taking HFCS out of its Hunt’s ketchup, Kraft (KFT) is banishing it from Wheat Thins and you will no longer find it in Snapple drinks. It’s all in response to what food companies say is overwhelming consumer demand. “We know moms don’t like it, and they don’t want to feed it to their kids,” supermarket expert Phil Lempert told Ad Age. Last month, outraged San Francisco parents forced high fructose corn syrup out of chocolate milk in the school system. More products are sure to follow.

Rightly or wrongly, HFCS is deeply entrenched as the most popular symbol of the growing consumer distrust of a food system that churns out nutritionally empty, overprocessed foods with a long list of strange, unpronounceable ingredients.

And now the Princeton study gives HFCS foes the scientific bombshell they’ve been looking for, since actual evidence that HFCS is worse than sugar is scant. The university reports that rats that ate HFCS gained significantly more weight than those that ate table sugar, even when their overall caloric intake was the same. The fact that the results of this study may be based on inconclusive results and thus not really offer convincing evidence, as NYU nutrition expert and no fan of HFCS Marion Nestle, points out, will likely get lost in the shuffle.

If only the Corn Refiners Association had changed the name of their beleaguered product, things might have worked out differently. Despite its name, high fructose corn syrup is only marginally higher in fructose, which has been clearly linked to obesity and metabolic syndrome, than regular sugar. (The fructose however is not chemically bonded to glucose as it is in sugar and thus more freely available to the body, so that could actually make a difference, though it’s never been proven).

But when you’re trying to tell people that your product doesn’t have a lot of fructose, but it’s called high fructose corn syrup, it’s a bit like naming your new butter alternative Extra Trans Fat Margarine. No one’s going to buy it.

http://industry.bnet.com/food/10001771/the-death-of-high-fructose-corn-syrup/

I sense a series coming….

I sense a series coming….

“Everything that we don’t like doing, we can do in a way that we do like doing.”
—A 6-year-old

(via viafrank, mv470)

"The Letter."

This is so vital to our school’s well-being.

rcalderoncota:

Read it.

Analyze it.

Support it.

Newly designed without a need to job hunt. What is a girl to do…

Newly designed without a need to job hunt. What is a girl to do…

Nothing can describe the joy it brings me when I find a fantastic new type face. Okay, that might be a bit dramatic, but still!

NIGHTNIGHT by DEDDY