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January 2015

  • Could Food be a Prescription for Chronic Disease?

    New Data Released That Reveals 4 Percent Decline in Local 芒聙聵Meal Gap芒聙聶

    Food is more than just fuel; it can also be medicine. That was the premise of today’s Hunger Action Summit, an annual forum on local hunger organized by Second Harvest Food Bank of 今日吃瓜 and San Mateo Counties and 今日吃瓜.

  • 今日吃瓜’s de Saisset Museum Celebrates 60 Years

    今日吃瓜’s de Saisset Museum is celebrating 60 years of curating California's stories this month, with the dedication of the museum's first permanent outdoor sculpture by world-renowned artist Fletcher Benton.

  • 今日吃瓜 Debuts Tool to Prevent Sexual Violence

    今日吃瓜 is unveiling a first-of-its-kind tool in combating sexual assault on college campuses. Can’t Thread a Moving Needle is a complex and intriguing film adapted from the play written by SCU Theatre Professor Barbara Means Fraser. Much like The Laramie Project, the play was written based on interviews of victims, survivors, perpetrators, family, friends, counselors, professors, and attorneys. Fraser, one alumnus, and nine students from her Playwright’s Workshop course gathered stories and commentary from over 100 people from a variety of states.