Nutrition
classes assist community
Students to work at Empty Bowl
Luncheon
By Lara Hendrickson
Staff Reporter
Many students enrolled in nutrition professor Lyn Darts
classes are volunteering at the Empty Bowls Luncheon
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. today at the Bass Performance
Hall in the Maddox-Muse Center.
Dart said each semester, students in the nutritional
sciences department help different organizations in
the community that have a focus on nutrition for a required
community service credit. About 50 TCU students from
the Issues of Food in Society classes and in the Coordinated
Program in Dietetics will be volunteering at this event,
Dart said.
Andrea Helm, communications director for the luncheon,
said the luncheon is called the Empty Bowls Luncheon
because for the $20 fee, everyone chooses a donated,
handcrafted bowl that they keep after the event.
Were expecting 750 to 1,000 people,
Helm said. We could raise as much as $20,000.
All proceeds raised, including the $28,000 already donated
from sponsors, will go toward the Tarrant Area Food
Bank, Helm said.
Dart said since this was the first year for the Empty
Bowls Luncheon, the Tarrant Area Food Bank was in need
of this large number of volunteers to help with the
event, and her students were made for the job.
An event such as this is ideal for our Coordinated
Program in Dietetics students who have first-hand experience
with all aspects of food preparation and food service,
Dart said.
All those who attend the luncheon will receive samples
of foods and desserts from a number of different restaurants
including the Ashton Hotel, Cafe Aspen and Escargot
Restaurant, Helm said.
Woolridge said both the students and the community benefit
from the service.
We are really excited to help the community,
Woolridge said. This is extremely beneficial because
it deals with the hungry, which is an important issue
in society.
Dart said this program is just as beneficial to the
student who volunteers.
By donating their time and energy, the student
helps to meet the needs of the organization, which in
turn benefits the community they live in, Dart
said. At the same time, the student gains valuable
interactive skills in communication and learning how
to work as a group member in the community. Thus, everyone
wins.
While this is the first year for the Empty Bowls luncheon
to be held in the Fort Worth area, the idea is about
four years old, Helm said. Dallas County has held the
previously successful event and Helm said it is important
for students as well as the community to recognize it.
Most people have no idea how bad malnutrition
is, Helm said. The Empty Bowls Luncheon
keeps hunger right in front of us in the local community.
Lara
Hendrickson
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