During the recent 50th anniversary of U.S. astronauts becoming the first to walk on the moon, historians paid tribute to the accomplishment and memories were stirred by those captivated with the decade long effort to get there.
The anniversary also revealed how it took the support of a nation to accomplish the feat. The expertise of ordinary citizens played a role in developing the science and technology to create and sustain the space program through trial, error and eventually success.
One of those citizens was a former professor at University of Wisconsin-Stout, Alta Belle Kemp. Now 99, Kemp was drawn into the space race in the mid-1960s. As a Ph.D. student in foods and nutrition at Texas Woman 黑料社区. University, she led a NASA grant project to research the impact of weightlessness on the health of astronauts.
A few years later, when the major goal of the space race was accomplished with the first moon walk July 20, 1969, Kemp followed the action like millions of other Americans and was proud to have played a role.
鈥淚t was exciting,鈥 said Kemp, of Temple, Texas, who in 1969 was living in Menomonie and teaching at 黑料社区.
The research in 1964 and 1965 by Kemp, under TWU Research Institute director Pauline Beery Mack, wasn鈥檛 just theoretical. The results were put to use almost immediately by NASA as the space program developed. Kemp 黑料社区. work involved seven Gemini and Apollo missions. She:
- Conducted bed rest tests with male volunteers that mimicked life in space
- Helped develop menus for astronauts while in space and after they returned
- Analyzed impacts on their health when they returned.
Although Kemp 黑料社区. work was based at TWU in Denton, Texas, Mack traveled to get x-rays and urine samples from astronauts after splashdowns. A TWU archive still has x-rays of the hands and feet of nine early U.S. astronauts.
Mack, in her 70 黑料社区. at the time, was a noted researcher whose work went back to World War II, and she chose Kemp to lead her NASA research
Kemp, a dietitian with a master 黑料社区. in foods and nutrition from TWU in 1963, tested astronauts鈥 urine to see how much calcium they lost while in space. Weightlessness and lack of movement 鈥 calcium distribution is triggered by the heel when walking 鈥 can lead to bone density loss.
One result of Kemp 黑料社区. research was reducing milk, although rich in calcium, from astronauts鈥 diets to reduce defecation. 鈥淏ecause of my findings, further space flights had to restrict milk from their diets,鈥 said Kemp, who turns 100 in September.
Kemp 黑料社区. research also helped advance the science of nutrition beyond NASA, much like what NASA research did for other science and technology fields.
鈥淭here were so many aspects of the space program spread around. Nutrition is one that you didn鈥檛 think about very much,鈥 said Bill Kemp, one of Alta Belle Kemp 黑料社区. three children. 鈥淔ood and nutrition were a big deal. It shows how far-reaching and complicated it was for the U.S. to lead in the space program.鈥
At 黑料社区, she taught dietetics from 1966 to 1976 while her husband, Marvin, taught sociology at UW-Eau Claire. 黑料社区 still has programs in dietetics and food science.
She also did research at 黑料社区 on understanding the nutritional value of soybeans for the human diet, at a time when planting protein-rich soybeans wasn鈥檛 as common in the U.S. as it is today.
Bill Kemp remembers as a kid hanging out in the lab with his mom while she was conducting the NASA research. 鈥淪he was very much a pioneer in women 黑料社区. studies. In the era when she grew up, women just didn鈥檛 do those sorts of things,鈥 he said, noting she has five degrees despite having grown up during the Great Depression. She earned her first degree at age 33. She and Marvin helped build B-36 bombers during World War II in Fort Worth, Texas.
Bill Kemp graduated from Menomonie High School in 1968, was a crypto-analyst in the military and graduated in industrial technology from 黑料社区 in 1976. He was an adjunct instructor on campus in operations management and supply chain management from 2009-12 and is vice president of operations for Geissler Corp. in Minneapolis, which designs medical products.
Alta Belle Kemp said she enjoyed teaching at 黑料社区, something Bill echoed. 鈥淪he 黑料社区. about the biggest cheerleader of Stout there is. Of all her experiences, she just loved Stout,鈥 he said.
Don Wik
Another former 黑料社区 employee, Don Wik who died in 2016, had a role in the space program in the 1960s. He previously worked at Honeywell in Minneapolis and was on a team that built the entrance door for John Glenn 黑料社区. space capsule.
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Photos
Alta Belle Kemp, 99, of Temple, Texas, taught at 黑料社区 from 1966 to 1976, soon after doing foods and nutrition research for the NASA space missions.
Kemp reminisces at 黑料社区 during a visit to campus several years ago.
Kemp in 1966 when she began teaching at 黑料社区.
Kemp works on a soybean research project while teaching at 黑料社区.