Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, September 30, 1978, Image 24

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    —Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 30,1978
24
Lisa Miller
(Continued from Page 1) Congeniality vote from the
French and photography contestants.
clubs and the yearbook daughter of Mr. and
advertising staff. She is a - rs - Howard Teets, of
H club member and teen Rochester Rl, 16-year-old
leader and is active 8 t UuT®”* » * senior at Freedom
North Buffalo United Arcs High School, where she
Presbyterian Church. holds the unique honor of
Lisa is one of five children Paying the role of “school
and the second of the unascot.” Kim’s other school
family’s daughters to include mem
represent Washington bership in the National
County’s milk producers. Honor Society and the
Her older sister, Susan, won French club,
the county title in 1973-74. Second runner-up is
“We’re over whelmed!” H° nnle Jeanne Snyder,
admitted James Miller, Schuylkill County’s pageant
shaking his head and representative,
grinning, when asked how he , Bonnie is 16 and the
felt about having a new daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
princess in the family. The Ralph D. Snyder of Pitman.
Millers maintain a herd of 40 She is student council
registered and grade president at Tn-Valley High
Holsteins and are members School, where she is a senior
of Milk Marketing, Inc., a m college preparatory
cooperative that serves c ? urse * addition to ser
western Pennsylvania, Ohio captain of the
and West Virginia, Included and a varsity
in the farming enterprise are cheerleader, Bonnie par
-450 acres in corn and hay. ticipates in several sports
As the final hurdle in her- activities,
race for the crown, Lisa A crowd of several hun
gracefully fielded an on-the- dred dairy indu
spot question that dealt with representatives filled the
how she would handle a elegant ballroom at Camp
kindergartener who insisted Hill’s Penn Hams Motor Inn
that milk was “Yucciness, on Wednesday evening for
not happiness.” annual All-American
Kim Teets, representing dairy show recognition
Beaver-Lawrence Counties, banquet and princess
was selected the first run- coronation. An air of eager
ner-up and earned the anticipation filled the
highly-prized Miss gathering as seven top
finalists were chosen from
preliminary competition.
Finalists, in addition to the
top three winners were
Robin O’Neal, Bedford
County the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. David O’Neal,
Saxton Rl; Sue Smith,
Clarion-Venango Counties,
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Louraine Smith, Mayport
Rl; June C. Beatty, Indiana
County, the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Alvin C. Beatty,
Indiana Rl; and Penny
Jeanne Brockett, Mifflin
County, the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John Brockett,
Lewistown R 4.
Before the coronation,
recognition was given to
several other contestants for
outstanding achievement in
various aspects of the
pageant competition.
Two awards were
presented for outstanding
scrapbooks. Winners were
Kathy Jo Strock, Cum
berland County princess, the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J.
Paul Strock, Mechanicsburg
R 9, and .the Berks County
princess, Teresa Ann
Wolfskill, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Mark Wolfskill,
Robesonia Rl.
Each contestant was
required during preliminary
competition to perform an
original skit or talk
promoting the dairy industry
and aimed at a specific age
group. Four top winners
were selected and gave their
presentations as part of the
evening program.
All four were well received
by the audience and each
won warm rounds for the
originality and enthusiasm
of the individual performers.
Newly-crowned princess,
Lisa Miller, complete with
black cape, silk top hat and
wand, presented a magic act
saluting the magical
production of milk.
Clanan-Venango’s Sue
Smith donned a colorful
cheerleader outfit and led
the dairy-oriented audience
in cheers for nature’s most
perfect food. Connie Mc-
Feeters, Lebanon County,
carted in her Raggedy Ann
doll and promoted milk from
the strikingly humorous and
honest standpoint of a five
year-old. Adams County
princess, Carol Zepp, slipped
into her cardboard box
telephone booth for a
transformation from a little
old promoter into
“superpnncess,”
Bidding farewell to a reign
Which took her “thousands of
miles and to visit thousands
of people,” Sandy Miller, of
Berks County the 1977-78
princess, thanked those who
had helped in her visits
across the state in behalf of
the dairy industry.
But she noted that the
dairy princess is still just
one person, and dairy
promotion must come from
each farmer and farm wife,
especially by using their
product when eating away
from home.
Special guest at the
recognition dinner was
Pennsylvania Secretary of
Agriculture Kent
Shelhamer. He commended
the dairy industry for its
promotional efforts but
noted that one-third of the
state’s counties are still not
participating in the princess
PLANT TROJAN HYBRIDS
THE HIGH YIELDING HYBRID
FOR PROFIT MAKING FARMERS
II SHOW PLOT OH FARMII
Dealer
KERVIN ZIMMERMAN
X,\ Myerstown RD#2, Pa.
Ph; 717-866-4081
pageant and milk promoting
effort’s and encouraged
them to do so.
The Pennsylvania Dairy
Princess and Milk
Promotion Committee and
The Keystone Milk
Marketing Council spon
sored the pageant as part of
their ongoing dairy
promotional activities.
Judges for the pageant
were Elden R. Groves,
editor of Farm and Dairy, an
Ohio weekly farm
newspaper, Robert
McKown, editor of the
Holstein World magazine,
Carol A. Preston, former
American Dairy Princess,
and Dianna Engelbrecht
former state-level princess.