Space Food Spotlighted At Blast-Off Breakfast Food editors and reporters from the nation’s most impor tant consumer magazines, wire services, home economics publi cations, and syndicated news paper columns heard Dr. Mal colm C. Smith, NASA’s Chief of Food and Nutrition, discuss the care and feeding of astronauts in the Apollo Space Program. The event was the Blast-Off Breakfast sponsored by the Poultry and Egg National Board and three other food associa tions, held 50 floors atop the Time-Life Building in New York City. Following a brief welcome and the introduction of repre sentatives from the event’s co sponsoring organizations, the National Live Stock and Meat Board, the American Bakers As sociation, and the Florida Citrus Commission, the food editors and other guests were treated to an authentic astronaut’s pre flight breakfast of a 12-ounce sirloin steak, two scrambled eggs, orange juice (reconstitut ed at the table), toast, and cof fee. During the breakfast meal, Howard Hehner, PENB’s east ern representative, called atten tion to the fact that while the hearty breakfast is designed to fortify the astronauts for the difficult space missions, today’s average urban worker and com muter may face more harrowing times in merely getting to work. He daily faces a plight of sub ways, commuter trains, and big city pressures, yet blasts off with little or no nutritional fuel at all. Dr. Smith discussed the im portance of food in space flight, not only to the astronaut’s phy sical condition, but its psycholo gical effect. He explained that this is one reason they are stri ing to prepare foods that look and taste like the foods the as tionauts eat here on earth. Each astronaut selects the food he wants on the space mis sion for each meal and these are packaged and color coded. Recoids are kept for each mis sion that show what was sent up, what was consumed, and what was returned unopened Dr. Smith related that prac tically all of the astronauts have lost weight during space flights, even though plenty of nuti itious food was available to them. “However, we are making much progress and have consid erably improved the food since the start of the space program, 1 ' stated Dr. White. “We have found that the astronauts need and want more than just a pill that contains the necessary nu trients.” Press Kits distributed to the guests following the program contained a PENB release en titled, “Astronauts Blast-Off With a Balanced Breakfast.” In cluded also were sample packets of the new freeze dried egg pro duct used on the APOLLO XII Mission, and produced for NA SA by Freeze Dry Products, Inc, of Evansville, Indiana In addition to the eggs, the co sponsoring organizations in cluded samples of their space products, and NASA made available food samples packaged Qsogoife ti ,, y/(G6toigB y il- DIRECTORS, OFFICERS N- 1 - THE BOARD OF AND EMPL THE CONE! NATIONAL WISH YOU YOURS THI HAPPIEST HOLIDAYS CHRISTMAS 1969 Cones mmn LANCASTER/CENTERV)LLE/EAsr/LANDISVILLE/LITiTZ MANHEIM TOWNSHtP/MILLERSVILLE/ROHRERSTOWN MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION A Trustee tor The Lancaster County Fountfatien Follow Instructions If labels on meat and poultry products carry storage directions be sure to follow them, says Harold Neigh, Penn State exten sion consumer economics spec ialist. Buy products marked "Keep Refrigerated” only if they are refugerated in the store Al so make sure frozen products are solidly frozen when you buy them. Who says today’s homemakers have it easier 7 Instead of bak ing for days befoie Chustmas, mom now spends houis defiost ing goodies in the actual food pouches used on the Apoolo missions. One immediate reaction to the Blast-Off Breakfast was made by Alice Denhoff, food editor for the nationally circu lated King Features Syndicate, who arranged to meet with PENB in order to prepare an article on the importance of bringing back the breakfast as fuel for our bodies and minds in today’s space age pace of living My Neighbors “I wonder if ne can’t get federal matching funds for this protect ” Lancaster Farming, Saturday, December 27,1969—17 Ladies, Have You Heard?... By Doris Thomas, Extension Home Economist Have A Safe And Merry Christinas Caicfully check old slungs of lights If sockets and connections are damaged or cords fiayed, Ihiow them awaj If you must use a stung of lights with fiayed coids, tape each wue sepai ately with electrician’s tape, Tiees that have built in electucal systems should have the UL label to show that they have been inspected for electucal safely When you buy new stungs of lights, be sure they cairy the UL label. These may cost a little more than those not apioved, but the ad ditional cost is good safety insurance Before stringing lights on the tiee, be suie theie is a bulb in every socket and eveiy bulb is the right size. Place bulbs on the tree so that they don’t touch foliage, paper or cotton. Use only fireproof decorations Check tree from time to time and if foliage has turned brown, relocate the lights Warn children to keep hands to take tiee down and out of the away from light strings, indoors house. and out. Replace burned out Electric trams can thiow bulbs and leave no socket empty sparks, so lay the tracks far to invite small fingers. from the tree. Disconnect lights from wall On metallic trees use spot or outlets when not in use or when flood lights, not strings of lights family is away. in fluect contact , . , . „ All cords, plugs, sockets and Keep the tree in water at all used outdoors should be times. Dry evei greens burn eas ily. 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