“Pope Asks Foundation to Support Islamic Studies (Zenit News Agency)” plus 1 more |
Pope Asks Foundation to Support Islamic Studies (Zenit News Agency) Posted: 03 Feb 2010 01:46 PM PST Message from fivefilters.org: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. By Costantino Coros ROME, FEB. 3, 2010 (Zenit.org).- The new chairman of the Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice Foundation is affirming that Benedict XVI has asked that they support Islamic and Arabic studies. Domingo Sugranyes Bickel told ZENIT that this is one of the projects his foundation will be committed to, as they continue to promote a better understanding of the social doctrine of the Catholic Church. Sugranyes, was born in Fribourg, Switzerland, though his family is of Spanish nationality. He served a term as president of the International Christian Union of Business Executives, of which he has been a member since 1969. He began working for the MAPFRE Spanish insurance company in 1981, and soon climbed to the position of executive vice-president. Although Sugranyes retired from his executive post in 2007, he continues to serve on the corporation's board, as well as that of many other organizations. In this interview with ZENIT, the new chairman, elected last November, speaks about the foundation's work to bring Catholic social doctrine to the business world. The Magisterium's texts require from economic operators, first of all, a personal effort in changing the way of seeing the objectives and methods of their actions. It is an invitation that the encyclicals address to believers and "to all men of good will." There are no short-cuts that enable one to "apply" the social doctrine without that long personal journey. In Italy they have the possibility of doing so in the courses organized jointly by the foundation and the Pontifical Lateran University. In other countries there are other institutions that impart this type of formation, and the foundation plans to establish agreements with them in the next few years to constitute a network of educational centers at the disposition of the members. In addition to theoretical formation, the foundation pursues another more concrete statutory objective: It collects funds to support endeavors or institutions selected by the Holy Father or designated by him for our attention. Generated in this way also for the members is a material obligation of commitment. Thus we also come close to a field of enormous interest in today's world: the interreligious dialogue on issues of economic and social ethics. However, we are not alone! Fortunately, there are many initiatives in the world working in the same direction, and there is much to do for all, seeking the enrichment that comes from such varied experiences. Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. | |
Posted: 04 Feb 2010 01:00 AM PST Message from fivefilters.org: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it. | As the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and others consider various food labeling formats, recent research by the International Food Information Council Foundation (Foundation) provides valuable insight into how consumers perceive and use the Nutrition Facts panel (NFP) found on food and beverage labels. Washington, DC (Vocus/PRWEB ) February 4, 2010 – As the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and others consider various food labeling formats, recent research by the International Food Information Council Foundation (Foundation) provides valuable insight into how consumers perceive and use the Nutrition Facts panel (NFP) found on food and beverage labels.
Based on the overall findings from its three-phase research project, the Foundation learned that consumers generally have a positive perception of the food label, but also found that there are several ways the label potentially could be enhanced to help people understand the information provided and use it even more effectively: "We believe that addressing consumers' need for usable information on the Nutrition Facts panel will accelerate efforts to improve the diet and health of Americans," said International Food Information Council Foundation President and CEO David B. Schmidt. With the FDA looking into NFP changes and studying how these changes may affect consumers' understanding of the information provided on the label, the Foundation has shared this research to assist the Agency with its work. The Foundation's research highlights the critical need for conducting additional consumer research to determine if the benefits of certain enhancements to the NFP outweigh any confusion they may generate. Also, any changes must be accompanied by appropriate consumer education to ensure that people know how to use the information provided. Key findings from the three Foundation research studies, including visuals of the consumer-suggested label enhancements tested: (1) Food Label Consumer Research: Qualitative Phases Summary Report (2008), 2) Food Label Consumer Research Project: Quantitative Phase III Summary Report (2009), and 3) Food & Health Survey (2009), are available on www.foodinsight.org. For the full research reports and any other questions, please contact the Foundation media team at 202-296-6540, Mittenthal(at)ific(dot)org or Matthews(at)ific(dot)org The International Food Information Council Foundation's mission is to effectively communicate science-based information on health, nutrition, and food safety for the public good. Additional information on the Foundation is available on the "About" section of our Web site. For interviews with experts or other questions please, call (202)296-6540. ### Bookmark - Del.icio.us | Furl It | Technorati | Ask | MyWeb | Propeller | Live Bookmarks | Newsvine | TailRank | Reddit | Slashdot | Digg | Stumbleupon | Google Bookmarks | Sphere | Blink It | Spurl Five Filters featured article: Chilcot Inquiry. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
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