New Frozen Yogurt (Continued from Page B 12) type of product the public would be interested in. and if it met the Haagen-Dazs image,” she said. She also worked on two other Extraas flavors that Haagen-Dazs was already developing. She did stability testing on Brownie Nut Blast, a chocolate frozen yogurt with brownie chunks and pecans, and Raspberry Rendevous, vanilla frozen yogurt swirled with rasp berry sorbet “The frozen yogurt base has four percent fat and the raspberry sorbet is fat-free,” mak ing the complete product very low in fat Keener noted. Keener’s experience at Haagen- Dazs cemented her interest in pro duct development The skills she learned as an intern can be applied to any food, she said. This past summer Keener was an intern at M&M/Mars in Eli zabethtown, where she did lab. research on one of the major cho colate brands, exploring various • Agricultural • Commercial • Residential • Retaining Walls • Bunker Silos • Manure Storage, Etc. LET OUR EXPERIENCE WORK FOR YOU ESTABLISHED SINCE 1979! WE ORIGINATED THE CONCRETE SYSTEM! Sizes And Layouts To Your Specifications We Work Hard For Customer Satisfaction! properties of chocolate. And, “the place smelled wonderful,” she said. The M&M/Mars job was more research-oriented than her Haagen-Dazs experience; she ran experiments and analyzed pro ducts she made. Here also, she had to taste her creations. While readi ly admitting to being a chocoholic, Keener said she “tried not to always consume the product You start to pay for it after awhile.” The daughbter of D. Mark and Elisabeth Keener of Chambers burg. Keener was recently accepted at Kansas State Universi ty’s graduate school in the field of grain science. She would like to work as a product developer for a food company that markets com plex carbohydrate foods such as cookies, cakes and crackers. Calling her internships “won derful opportunities that I snatched up,” Keener said that Commodity Bins And Trench Silos Authorized Dealer For KEYSTONE CONCRETE PRODUCTS • Hog & • Trench Cattle Silo Slats Walls • H-Bunks • J-Bunks such work experiences “are great for applying classroom know ledge to die real world of the food industry. In school, we learned a lot of theory, but we didn’t get to make new foods.” While she may not have been creating new taste sensations at Penn State, she was part of the school’s long-standing ice cream tradition. She worked in the Creamery one summer helping to process dairy products. Later, she gave tours to visitors, explaining how raw milk from the school’s dairy herd was transformed into ice cream and cheese. Keener’s association with Penn Slate starred while she was still a student at Chambersburg Area Senior High School. Between her junior and senior year, she attended the five-week Pennsylva nia Governor’s School fra- the agricultural sciences at Penn State. This experience clilnched her decision to be a food science major, she said. She especially INC. 430 Concrete Ave., Leola, PA 717-656-2016 Uncttt* Firming, Sunday, January i, iim-bis enjoyed the “From Bean to Bar” lab at the Governor’s School, where students process cocoa. “This was an aspect of agricul ture that I hadn’t been exposed to Tractor Manufacturer Offers Seat For Extra Rider UNIVERSITY PARK (Centre Co.) —Farm equipment manufac turers are taking steps to improve tractor safety by offering models equipped with an extra seat But the ability of these devices to re duce fatalities remains unknown, says a safety expert in Penn Stare’s College of Agricultural Sciences. “Each year, approximately 300' American fanners die in tractor accidents,” says Dr. Dennis Mur phy, professor of agricultural en gineering. “Some of the saddest incidents involve extra riders who fall from moving equipment and are crushed.” Some 1993 tractors now in clude a passenger seat with a seat belt. “So far, only one U.S. tractor manufacturer sells models equip ped with a passenger seat,” Mur phy says. “Whether others will follow remains to be seen.” U is common practice for trac tors sold in some European coun tries to have a passenger seat, but American farm safety profession als are just beginning to debate the merits of the device. By offering an extra seat, U.S. tractor makers are acknowledging that farmers do not always choose the safest course of action. “An extra person will ride on a tractor for various reasons, including in struction or convenience,” Mur phy says. “Allowing an extra rider on a tractor can become deadly. before,” she said. ‘There’s a lot of chocolate research going on here. The American Cocoa Research Institute is pan of the Food Sci ence department here.” Unfortunately, it happens. For in stance, employees will ride on a tractor for transportation around the farmstead and the field.” Murphy says that the best poli cy remains keeping extra riders off a tractor. “But if people aren’t willing to do that, at least this seat offers some protection. The pas senger seats are available only in tractors that have an enclosed cab with a rollover protection struc ture, or ROPS, which prevents the rider from falling into the path of the tractor. “The seat’s design also discour ages long rides, which is good,” Murphy says. “It’s too early to say these seats are absolutely safe, but they do provide a safer location for a passenger than those typical ly selected on tractors without provisions for a rider.” A property positioned passeng er is less likely to hamper the safe operation of the controls or ob struct the operator’s vision. “If an accident does occur, the passenger is less likely to be injured in a pas senger seat with the seat belt se cured than in any unrestrained lo cation,” Murphy says. However, Murphy fears that some fanners will abuse the de vice. “The seat is designed only for short rides and is not intended for children,” he says. “If farmers don’t respect those limitations, tragedies may result.” • Made of 13 gauge Steel • All welded seams • Gravity Flow or Auger Free Estimates Also - Steel Roof Trusses for Buildings • Portable Hog Buildings - Bucket Elevators - Grain Augers Distributors - Flow Pipes & Accessories We Sell, Service & Install Ph: 717-345-3724 Fax: 717-345-2294 STOLTZFUS WELDING SHOP Owner - Samuel P. Stoltzfus RO 3, Box 331 Pine Grove. PA 17963