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North Carolina

Food Shuttle Trains N.C. Teens to Tend Farm

Wednesday, May 9th, 2012

Every Tuesday and Saturday, 16 students from Raleigh, N.C., area high schools spend a few hours learning to plant, grow and cook sustainable foods. Their classroom is the Inter-Faith Food Shuttle farm, which helps urban kids nurture the land as well as their neighbors in need. The Young Farmer Training Program provides its teenaged apprentices with a weekly paycheck, fresh produce, farming know-how for a lifetime and the chance to cook for the hungry. Besides working their own farm, the teens visit other local farms to see how they work and, sometimes, to pick surplus crops to cook for the Food Shuttle’s other programs.

Young Farmer Training Program apprentices harvesting spring lettuce at the Inter-Faith Food Shuttle's farm in Raleigh, N.C. (Photo by TRAVIS LONG, News & Observer)

Young Farmer Training Program apprentices harvest spring lettuce recently at the Inter-Faith Food Shuttle's farm in Raleigh, N.C. (Photo by TRAVIS LONG, News & Observer)

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Young Farmer Training Program Takes a Tour

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Young Farmer-in-Training Studies Plants

Patrick Onguti, 17, takes notes as part of the Young Farmers Training Program in Raleigh, N.C. (Photo by TRAVIS LONG, News & Observer)

Patrick Onguti, 17, takes notes as part of the Young Farmers Training Program in Raleigh, N.C. (Photo by TRAVIS LONG, News & Observer)

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Genes May Determine Vegetarian Diet

Monday, May 7th, 2012

More and more teens, it seems, are becoming vegetarian. If you are among them, it could be that you were born with an aversion to meat. That’s what researchers at Duke University found in a recent study, anyway. Some people possess two copies of the human OR&D4 gene, which is an odor receptor. They have a hard time tolerating the smell of meat, even bacon!

If you can't stand the smell of meat, your genetic makeup could be the reason according to researchers at Duke University. (Photo by CYCLONEBILL, Flickr via One Green Planet)

If you can't stand the smell of meat, your genetic makeup could be the reason, according to researchers at Duke University. (Photo by CYCLONEBILL, Flickr, via One Green Planet)

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Meatless Monday at Duke

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