Bwog’s new Satow Room bureau chief Martha Turewicz reports on last night’s meeting.
As far as CCSC meetings go, some are pretty unremarkable. But others, like last night’s, stand out as veritable gems, with VP of Campus Life Lindsey Lazopoulos as the star of the show, proffering bon mots left, right and center.
To wit: Student council is putting a “Cherry on Top” with a study break this coming weekend featuring discounted JJ’s ice cream. Lazopoulos delved into the heart of the matter: “Will they have chocolate?”
Likewise, to Lazopoulos’s relief, John Jay’s new chef will be serving up new sustainable sea food (read: salmon) once a month. “No more swordfish!” she opined.
Cage-free eggs are coming in a trial run to 212 or Ferris Booth. In light of the issue of cruelty-free eggs, some reps will be visiting a chicken farm, arousing Lazopoulos’s concern. “Will there be happy chickens? I don’t like this conversation, it’s getting really sad.”
(Other gastronomic developments include free JJ’s on March 12, and an upcoming junior class-sponsored study break featuring O.G. snacks like Dunkaroos—the mention of the latter got the whole room worked up in an elementary-school-kid-on-sugar-rush fervor.)
But Lazopoulos was not without helpful advice: When the talk turned to OBGYNs (in keeping with a new resolution to lower the cost of birth control through the health services plan), she reminded the room “Every six months you should go, ladies.” George Krebs, CC ’09 President, thanked her for the reminder.
10 Comments
@Lindsey Thank you, posters, for showing me some love. I would love to respond to post number four and tell her the many reasons why what I do on council is important, as well as the many things council is doing to address the issues he/she raised. I would also love to tell number seven that maybe my mom agrees with him sometimes, but really, I just want to say THANK YOU for the support and thatpositive people like you three make student council worthwhile
@Oh... Lindsey! I love her even if BWOG hates on her for being more attractive and popular than they are. I feel kind of sad for Bwog…poor bwog. :(
@... ccsc is nothing more than a worthless bunch of resume padders. what about manhattanville? what about student life fees? what about the space, core curriculum, bias incidents, etc, etc. don’t worry, the real issue is HAPPY CHICKENS! oh, and ice cream.
@on the other hand: Chickens are arguably as intelligent as dogs or cats, yet if someone treated his pets the way that chickens are abused on factory farms, he would be taken to court. Factory farming is an affront not only to animal welfare but to the environment, human health and sustainable agriculture in general. Columbia’s initiative to consume more responsibly by sourcing cruelty-free and sustainable food items deserves as much attention as do efforts to modify the core curriculum and encourage a tolerant campus atmosphere.
@... Yes, but is Lindsay Lazopoulos arguably as intelligent as dogs or cats? One wonders.
@... The truth of the matter is that Lindsey is one of the smarter people at this school. It might not seem like it since she is so down to earth and fun-loving but if you actually knew her, you would know.
P.S. Lindsay is spelled with an “e,” you genius
@It's true She’s one of the best things this school has going for it. A key difference between Lindsey and anyone else here is that she doesn’t have her head stuck up her own ass. Some people find that unusual (understandably so, at Columbia) and perplexing, so they mistakenly assume she’s inferior.
@just to clarify All seafood in John Jay is sustainable, but because of this salmon will be served less.. probably about once a month
@Didier Pompelmous Farm raised salmon endangers wild stock.
Pacific Northwest Salmon
TU has built a Pacific salmon program that spans the entire range of Pacific salmon and steelhead — from Southern California steelhead to sockeye in Alaska’s Bristol Bay and inland to the headwater spring chinook streams of central Idaho. We are protecting native-run kokanee in western Washington’s Lake Sammamish; we are helping to reconnect steelhead, chinook and sockeye to central Oregon streams they haven’t seen in decades; we are restoring passage on private timber lands for California coho; and, we are sustaining a conservation ethic by educating consumers about the conservation needs of healthy salmon fisheries. Employing aggressive and innovative strategies across all four Hs (Habitat, Hydropower, Hatcheries and Harvest) and throughout the salmon and steelhead’s entire historic range, TU staff and its thousands of volunteers are working tirelessly toward a singular vision: Ensuring that by the next generation that robust populations of native and wild salmon and steelhead once again thrive within their Pacific range so that our children can enjoy healthy fisheries in their home waters.
The foundation upon which TU’s WhyWild campaign is built is the idea that the people across the country who enjoy eating wild-caught Pacific salmon – as well as the businesses and industries that rely on wild-caught salmon – represent a massive community of advocates for the conditions required to allow wild Pacific salmon and steelhead to thrive. That means conservation. Our job is to educate, energize and mobilize those advocates and marshal the power of the marketplace to work for wild salmon and steelhead conservation. This summer we got a chance to put the WhyWild model to the test. Through a unique partnership TU helped broker, salmon consumers in the Portland, Oregon market got a rare chance to invest their salmon dollars in Bristol Bay, Alaska sockeye salmon, while at the same time to learn about the conservation challenges facing the area, and to lend their names in support of TU’s effort to protect it.
Our Work in Bristol Bay, Alaska
Most consumers in the lower 48 never never get a chance to try Bristol Bay sockeye or invest in the fishery, as infrastructure limitations within the fishing fleet and on shore render most of the catch suitable only for canning. Most of the all-wild sockeye catch ends up being shipped to Europe and Asia for pennies a pound. This under-valuing of the fishery, lack of out-of-area investment and limitation on the markets makes areas like Bristol Bay ripe for exploitation, like the proposed Pebble Mine, which TU has been leading the effort to stop in order to protect this irreplaceable fishery. But through a unique partnership between New Seasons Markets in Portland, Naknek Family Fisheries of Bristol Bay and TU, we were able to bring a shipment of high-grade, all-wild, fresh Bristol Bay sockeye in for customers of all eight New Seasons locations to try and enjoy. In turn, we gained a forum to educate consumers about the Pebble Mine, and to collect signatures to help us stop it. Naknek and Bristol Bay gained out-of-area investment and a much higher price for their catch, and consumers got a rare opportunity to enjoy this amazing quality fish at a fair price. It’s these linkages between fish and fishermen, the market and consumers, quality product and conservation awareness, and salmon dollars and resource value protection that embody the WhyWild campaign. In just a few hours on a Friday afternoon in Portland, Bristol Bay gained thousands of new advocates for its protection, its fishermen and fishing-dependent businesses gained immeasurable potential future investment, and Portland markets and consumers gained a new source of high-quality, wholesome, all-wild sockeye for their families to enjoy.
Join Us: Sign the Salmon Consumer’s Bill of Rights
Individual consumers who care about wild Pacific salmon and steelhead recovery haven’t really had their own voice over the clamor of governments, special interests and NGOs dominating the salmon conservation landscape. Until now. TU is building the community of individual consumers committed to wild salmon and steelhead, and teaming them with the businesses and industries who share the same commitment. The goal is to harness the collective power of the marketplace and use it to leverage the kinds of conservation actions necessary to make real and lasting wild Pacific salmon and steelhead recovery a reality. By signing onto the Bill of Rights you are joining that community. Through this community, your voice demanding healthy wild salmon and steelhead populations can and will be heard.
Visit http://www.whywild.org to learn more about Trout Unlimited’s Pacific Salmon Project and sign our Salmon Consumer’s Bill of Rights.
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@... what about the Glenn Thompson moment?
“$15” was by far the quote of the night!