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Nutrition And Milk: Almost all elements can now be determined by variations of this gen¬eral method. Methods employing radioactive trac¬ers other than the activation analysis technique have likewise proved of great importance in an¬alytical chemistry.
Applications in Agriculture.—The improve¬ment of plant nutrition often depends upon increas¬ing the efficiency of fertilizer uptake. The con¬dition of the soil and the mechanical placement of the fertilizer are among the factors which in¬fluence the rate of utilization. Radioactive phos¬phorus in phosphate fertilizers has been used as a rapid and accurate means for assessing the rate of fertilizer incorporation in growing plants. Radioactive tracers have also proved effective in other aspects of agriculture, such as in animal nutrition and milk production.
Other areas of nutrition in which research was being conducted included the use of spe¬cial diets to treat various metabolic diseases, vitamin D function, protein requirements, eval¬uation of nutritional deficiency, and vitamin E and aging. Some of the other topics being stud¬ied were nutrition education procedures, alcohol and nutrition, dental caries, dietary effects re¬lated to cellular function, and the relationship of nutrition to infectious diseases and the de¬velopment of immunity.
In 1967-68 a new understanding of the rela¬tionship between energy and environment was reached. The crucial issue was no longer whether there was sufficient fuel and power for the future but how man would manage the lib¬eration and use of energy. The energy engineer who had been concentrating on specific fuels and individual energy converters was now deal¬ing with large energy systems. Where he had once concentrated on the scientific aspects of a power problem, he now served as a bridge between scientific knowledge and socioeco-nomic needs.See Also Canneries And Milk -processing:The airport, municipally owned, is on the outskirts of the city. Rochester lies in a productive agricultural region, and it has canneries and milk -processing and milk-processing plants as well as factories producing hospital supplies, phonographs, agricultural equipment, and Toilet preparations. It is best known, however, as the home of the world-famous Mayo Clinic, whose 22-story build¬ing, surmounted by a tower with a 23-bell caril¬lon, dominates the city's sky line. Other facilities include the Mayo Foundation Museum of Hy¬giene and Medicine, a public library with a his¬torical museum, a state hospital for the mentally ill, and the Mayo Civic Auditorium, which has an arena and theater. The city has a senior and a junior high school and a junior college.
The dairy industry in the U.S. was alarmed over the threat that the "filled" and "imitation" milks posed to the fluid, fresh milk market. These new products made significant inroads in the milk market in 1967 and in some states, such as Arizona, took over as much as 5% of the fluid milk sales. Filled milk was made from skim milk or skim milk solids reconstituted with vegetable fat rather than milk fat. The imitation milks on the U.S. market had sodium caseinate as a base, together with vegetable fat and a particular flavoring agent. The ingredient costs permitted these products to be retailed at eight to ten cents per gallon cheaper than fresh milk.
On The Other Hand See Plenty Of Milk And Vegetables:HOUSING: Line small, strong cardboard box with plenty of milk and vegetables of soft,
warm cloths; protect pet from chilling at night.
FOOD: Give milk warmed to body temperature, using medicine dropper; feed every hour if pet is very young. As pet develops, feed by teaspoon; lengthen time between feedings and add stale dry bread soaked in milk. When gnawing teeth come through, add stale dry bread or dry butterless toast to milk diet. Later add a little bird and melon seed.
HOUSING: Line small, strong cardboard box with plenty of milk and vegetables of soft, warm cloths; protect pet from chilling at night.
FOOD: Give milk warmed to body temperature, using medicine dropper; feed every hour if pet is very young. As pet develops, feed by teaspoon; lengthen time between feedings, and add stale bread soaked in warm milk. When gnawing teeth come through, add stale bread or dry, butterless toast to milk diet. Later add a little bird and melon seed. |
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