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Media Center > News Releases

 

Hunter College Students Demand More Vegan Options


Students Team Up With peta2 to Try to Bring School's Dining Halls Into the 21st Century


For Immediate Release:
October 26, 2009

Contact:
Ryan Huling 757-622-7382

New York -- If you are a university student these days, it's easy to find top-notch vegetarian and vegan foods--unless you attend Hunter College. The school's dining services department has not been able to keep up with the increasing demand for vegan options on campus. That's why Hunter student Arianne Gans teamed up with peta2--the world's largest youth animal rights organization--to collect more than 1,400 signatures on a petition to expand students' meal choices. The petition reads, in part, "We have the right to healthy, humane options at every meal. I support vegetarian-friendly options!"

It's a little surprising that Hunter College is still flunking out with students who want healthy animal- and Earth-friendly food. According to food-service giant ARAMARK, which serves more than 400 campuses in the U.S. and Canada, nearly one-quarter of all college students want vegan options. For example, students at American University--which was named peta2's Most Vegetarian-Friendly College for 2008--can choose from a plethora of delicious vegan options, including spicy Korean barbecue and seitan in miso broth with noodles. Runner-up Wesleyan University's barbecue tempeh wraps and hearty Moroccan-style chickpea and tomato stew have even meat-eaters asking for seconds. And the vegan mozzarella and sausage pizza at the University of California-Berkeley only adds to that school's tradition of excellence.

Hunter College students know that vegan options are better for the environment and animals and help keep off that dreaded "freshman 15." In fact, student demand is so high that PETA produced its own book of recipes--PETA's Vegan College Cookbook--earlier this year.

"Any way you slice it, Hunter College fails to meet students' hunger for nutritious, humane, and Earth-friendly vegetarian options," says peta2's college campaign coordinator, Ryan Huling. "Even though Hunter is a major college, when compared with other schools that offer more progressive menus, it's small potatoes."

For more information, please visit peta2.com.




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