This article appeared
in Radio Iowa
June 14,
2008
World Food Prize goes to Dole, McGovern
By Pat Curtis
Two former rival U.S.
Senators from the Midwest will share this year's World Food Prize, an award
that is presented annually by an organization based in Iowa.
George McGovern and Bob Dole,
both former presidential nominees for their respective political parties,
helped create the International Food for Education and Child Nutrition Program
and that's why they're receiving the 2008 World Food Prize.
World Food Prize Foundation
President Kenneth Quinn says the program was established in 2000. "Since
then, it has provided meals to feed 22 million children in 41 countries and
boosted school attendance by 14 percent overall," Quinn said.
McGovern, who is now 85, is a
former Democratic Senator from South Dakota. Dole, 84, is a Republican from
Kansas. Quinn says their program, administered through the USDA, has
dramatically increased international support for school feeding operations
around the globe. "For example, the U.N. World Food Program's School
Feeding Programs have nearly doubled since 2001, and in 2006 alone, it fed more
than 20 million children in 74 countries," Quinn said.
Dole and McGovern will be
presented with the 2008 World Food Prize on October 16 at the Iowa State
Capitol in Des Moines. It will mark the first time since the award was created in
1986 that the $250,000 prize will be given to political leaders. Past prize
winners include scientists that have improved world-wide crop production.
Learn more at www.worldfoodprize.org.