Latest news with #Lunchtime


Irish Examiner
06-05-2025
- Sport
- Irish Examiner
Cork and Waterford to wear shorts in Munster camogie final
Cork and Waterford senior camogie players are expected to wear shorts as a form of protest in Saturday's Munster final in The Ragg. Following on from Dublin and Kilkenny's attempt to highlight the lack of choice regarding skorts by initially wearing shorts in Blanchardstown last Saturday, Cork and Waterford are set to do the same at the Tipperary venue this weekend. Speaking on Newstalk's Lunchtime show on Tuesday, Cork star Hannah Looney indicated they would be following suit. 'I can't speak on behalf of all our players at the moment, because we haven't sat down and had that vote similar to how Kilkenny and Dublin addressed it last week, but I'm sure we will be looking to take similar action at the weekend,' she said. Looney added that they too wanted to make their point considering 70% of inter-county players who responded to a GPA survey find wearing skorts uncomfortable and 83% want the choice of donning either skorts or shorts. 'I think it's important that we do shine a light to it again this weekend while it's a hot topic.' Read More Kieran Shannon: Camogie stance on skorts is insulting its players and hurting the sport Meanwhile, Sunday's Leinster SFC final between Louth and Meath in Croke Park is set to attract a bumper crowd in excess of 50,000. Both counties are reporting significant uptake in tickets ahead of their first provincial decider meeting in 15 years. That infamous 2010 clash drew a crowd of 48,875 to GAA HQ and the rematch is in line to be the largest for a provincial showdown since the Dublin-Kildare Leinster final of 2017, which recorded an attendance of 66,734. No provincial final has come close to that figure since then. In 2019, 47,027 watched Dublin trounce Meath to claim a ninth straight Leinster title. The closest to that figure outside Leinster since then was the Tyrone-Down Ulster showdown that same year, which brought 31,912 to Clones before the capacity of the St Tiernach's Park was scaled down following healthy and safety measures. Saturday evening's Armagh-Donegal Ulster SFC final in the Monaghan town will be a 29,000 sell-out. Tickets for the Clare-Tipperary Munster SHC Round 3 game in Ennis are also in high demand with an anticipated crowd similar to the 20,778 who were in attendance for last month's Cork game. No tickets are currently available on public sale for Sunday week's Limerick-Cork Munster SHC Round 4 game in TUS Gaelic Grounds, which is expected to reach the stadium's 41,000 capacity.


New York Times
23-04-2025
- Science
- New York Times
If You Think the School Lunch Battle is New — Go to Philadelphia
Surrounded by a group of 10th graders, Alex Asal, a museum educator at the Science History Institute in Philadelphia, read aloud from three school lunch menus. She asked the students to raise their hands for which sounded best. One menu had options such as pizza, Caribbean rice salad and fresh apples. Another had grilled cheese, tomato soup and green beans. The third featured creamed beef on toast and creamed salmon with a roll. That menu — which did prompt a few raised hands — was from 1914, Asal revealed. A century ago, butter and cream were considered as vital as fruits and vegetables are today because the concern was less about what children ate than whether they ate enough at all. The exhibition that had drawn students from the Octorara Area School District of Atglen, Pa., was 'Lunchtime: The History of Science on the School Food Tray.' It examines how this cornerstone of childhood became deeply intertwined with American politics, culture and scientific progress. From the earliest school food programs until now, 'what's been interesting for us about this topic is how discourses of nutrition and science have always been present,' said Jesse Smith, the museum's director of curatorial affairs and digital content. Smith didn't anticipate just how timely the exhibition would be when it opened about a month before the 2024 U.S. presidential election. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., appointed secretary of health and human services by President Trump, promotes the removal of processed foods from school lunches. History shows that his isn't the first attempt to change what people eat. 'Lunchtime' was developed from the Science History Institute's collection of books and scientific instruments related to food science. Located just down the street from Philadelphia's Independence Hall, where the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution were signed, the small museum and research library teaches the history of how science has shaped our everyday lives. In 1946, President Harry Truman signed the National School Lunch Act authorizing the creation of the National School Lunch Program. Today, according to the Food Research & Action Center, the program reaches approximately 28 million students. Of those, 23.6 million are in high-poverty districts that qualify for free lunch for all. 'It's a service to students, and something we provide on a daily basis to help the students learn,' said Lisa Norton, executive director of the division of food services for the Philadelphia school district. 'And we know that there are students that this is the only meal they are going to see.' The exhibition opens with the 1800s, as industrialization brings people to cities, far from the source of their food. Producers would cut corners, mixing wood shavings with cinnamon and chalk into flour. 'Probably the most notorious example was the dairy industry, which routinely added formaldehyde to milk to keep it from spoiling,' Asal said. And school medical inspections found that children were severely undernourished. Scurvy and rickets were widespread. The Institute of Child Nutrition, at the University of Mississippi, maintains an archive of photographs, oral histories, books and manuscripts, and Jeffrey Boyce, the institute's coordinator of archival services, provided several photographs for the exhibit. One shows a baby being fed cod liver oil, an old-fashioned remedy for vitamin A and D deficiency, in the age before vitamin-fortified cereal. Philadelphia became one of the first cities to have a school lunch program and, over the next few decades, local programs spread across the country in a movement led largely by women. A federal response to school lunches would come from the National School Lunch Act. 'The National School Lunch Program is the longest running children's health program in U.S. history, and it has an outsized impact on nutritional health,' said Andrew R. Ruis, author of the book 'Eating to Learn, Learning to Eat: The Origins of School Lunch in the United States,' which Smith used as a resource for the exhibit. 'Research in the '20s and '30s showed overwhelmingly that school lunch programs had a huge impact on student health, on educational attainment, on behavior and attitude.' As farmers faced ruin in the wake of the Great Depression, the Department of Agriculture purchased surplus crops to distribute to U.S. schools and as foreign aid. This decades-old partnership made headlines in March when the U.S.D.A. announced plans to cut $1 billion in funding to schools and food banks. School lunch programs have wide public support, but that has never stopped them from being a political football. In the 1960s, the civil rights movement drew attention to the fact that many poor children were still going hungry. The Black Panthers' free breakfast program helped fill the gap and put pressure on politicians. A table in the exhibition piled with Spam, TV dinners, bagged salad and Cheetos explained how military research into preservation created iconic American foods. These advancements, however, also helped put nutrition back under the microscope and led to the concern that young people were getting too much of the wrong kinds of foods. The 1973 board game 'Super Sandwich' tried to make nutrition fun, with players competing to collect foods that met recommended dietary allowances. Remember the controversy in the 1980s over whether ketchup qualified as a vegetable? It erupted in a larger battle over school lunch program cuts under the Reagan administration and further inflamed the national debate over school lunch quality. The Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010, and the public health campaign for children by the first lady, Michelle Obama, resulted in more fruits and vegetables, more whole grains and less sodium and sugar on lunch trays. But balancing those regulations with what young people will eat is a challenge, said Elizabeth Keegan, the coordinator of dietetic services for the Philadelphia school district who advised on the exhibition. Especially when median lunch prices, according to the School Nutrition Association, hover around $3. 'We always say, for less than what you pay for a latte, schools have to serve a full meal,' said Diane Pratt-Heavner, the association's director of media relations. Following their tour, the Octorara students reflected on the tales of wood shavings in food. They debated the quality of their own school lunches and what they would prefer: more variety, more vegetarian and vegan options, less junk food. 'It made me feel like we should get better food,' said Malia Maxie, 16. 'When she was talking about 1914, like how they got salmon — we don't get that anymore.' Those from generations raised on rectangular pizza may see it differently. 'From the days when I was in school, the meal program has totally transformed,' said Aleshia Hall-Campbell, executive director of the Institute of Child Nutrition. 'You have some districts out here that are actually growing produce and incorporating it in the menus. You have edamame at salad bars. They are trying to recreate what kids are eating out in restaurants and fast-food places, incorporating it from a healthier level.' Everyone has memories of school lunch. Boyce remembers 'the best macaroni and cheese on the planet' and the names of the cafeteria ladies. Smith remembers the Salisbury steak and that distinct cafeteria smell. For Ruis, the best day of the year was when his Bay Area school had IT'S-IT, a local ice-cream sandwich with oatmeal cookies. 'So much has changed, standards have changed, and what is considered healthy has changed,' Keegan said. 'But something that has never changed is that feeding kids a nutritious meal is important.'