Heuser ignites farm wives to promote agriculture HARRISBURG - Laura Heuser. The name has become synonymous in farm communications circles with the involvement of farm women m speaking out for agriculture. RDI, EPHRATA, PA 17522 PHONE: 717-733-9404 COMPLETE GRAIN HANDLING EQUIPMENT r BROCK""! f'CARDINAL'I J Feed Bins and + J Bucket Elevators J ♦ Grain Bins ♦ and Auger Equipment ♦ '\ > ' - / v > Q E. M. HERR EQUIPMENT, INC. R.D. 3 Sprecher Road Willow St., Pa. The featured afternoon speaker during Tuesday’s Penn’s Agri-Women con vention, Laura verbally marched her audience of farm women out the door and on the road toward total rb»» - WE SELL, SERVICE AND INSTALL dedication to public relations and communications work. A dynamic and humorous speaker, Laura Heuser has travelled thousands of miles sharing the need for constant communication and better IS IN STOCK fOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY & AUGEI Lancaster Co. 717-464-3321 rFARM?ANI Grain Dryer, Aeration and In-Bin Drying understanding between agricultural and non-farm groups. Instrumental in setting up American Agri- Women, she was an early recipient of the Chevron spokesman of the year award and was one of seven determined farm women who marched into labor leader George Meany’s office to tell the farm side of the grain embargo. In order to join the Pennsylvania women in their first con vention, she shortened her husband’s arrangements to take her on a vacation to Europe. “You can do most housewife stuff with half a brain,” accused Mrs. Heuser. “And just what are you doing with the rest of it?” Detailing the background of the founding of Women for the Survival of Agriculture in Michigan, Laura related how she responded to an ad in the paper calling for at tendance at a meeting by anyone interested in seeing agriculture survive. Ninety women came away from that gathering determined to organize. That successful movement spread into several other states, and then blossomed into the S'* M * v v ■ s v/ 1 < s N 15 X'K/ N Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 22,1977 Laura Heuser, nationally known spokesman for agriculture, really got into the swing of things on Tuesday when she addressed the first statewide convention of Penn's Agri-Women in Camp Hill. founding of American Agri- Women, a national com munications coalition. “We soon discovered we had talents we never knew existed,” she marvelled. “Did you know women make terrific politicians - that’s a very exciting thing to find out!” Stressing that com munications is a prime ingredient in successful farm understanding, Laura urged her listeners to “write, write, write.” “Make it part of your religion to write!” she stressed. “I don’t care if you use toilet paper and an eyebrow pencil, but tell your KIIROTD The In-Between ACTOR B6OOOT ► ■ This tractor is big on work, small on fuel Liquid cooled, 2-cylmder diesel, 2-wheel drive Takes a full range of implements dKUBOTH 85 years of customer satisfaction FREE DEMONSTRATION ♦ •KELLER BROS. TRACTOR CO.I ♦ Buffalo Springs Call (717) 949-6501 1 ▼ 10 Miles North of Lititz 4 side of the story. Tell it to legislators, bureaucrats, editors, television and radio broadcasters and from a soapbox in the supermarket if you have half a chance.” In urging the farm women to contact media people, Mrs. Heuser reminded them to always have enough details and answers ready to make a newsworthy and interesting story. “Farm women are too frequently like a $50,000 tractor kept setting in the shed to use for mowing the lawn!” she concluded. “Get that tractor out of the shed and put it to work. It’s an investment you must use.” SEE US FOR THAT EXTRA SPECIAL DEAL 93