I' 0L25H0.1l Ernie Frey captures junior beef title BY DEBRA STRICKLER HARRISBURG - Two ancaster County youths wept the coveted grand and eserve honors of the 1980 unior Beef Show held here Tiursday afternoon. Ernie Frey’s six years of itrong dedication to 4-H beef Lancaster Co . shepherds dominate sheep show BY SHEILA MILLER HARRISBURG - Three ancaster County families ook championship honors bring sheep competition at iondayVFarm Show. Starting off the day, larhara Herr, Narvon, flowed die grand champion larket lamb on foot. The finning lamb was a trossbred, Cheviot x Suffolk. She continued her winning treak by taking the grand hampidnship in both Dorset ama and ewes in breeding hee$ v competition. Her emale champ had reviotisly stood second in er class In national com etition at Louisville, [entucky. Herr, a junior at Garden pot, has started into the leep business in earnest, he owns six ewes in her inuly’s flock, along with wen showstring Dorsets. esides these sheep, she uses wethers and market mbs to sell. Although she has raised ampshires and Suffolks, as The supreme champion dairy animal, the first cow so honored at the Pennsylvania Farm Show, Was the handsome Holstein shown here between Max Perry, left, and Norman Craig. Her stabiemate, flanked by Marvin Miller, was the grand champion Guernsey. projects resulted in his capture of the 1980 Beef Show’s grand banner. The judges second tapping of Christian Herr’s reserve heavyweight champion provided the final assurance The champion Suffolk ewe was shown by Clyde Brubaker for Milton Morgan, of Lancaster. well as Dorsets, she says she likes the Dorset breed best because they have a good temperament. Herr said this was the first year she has done well at the Farm Show, although in previous years she has won Grand View fields supreme champion Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 12,1910 Lancaster County was to*, dominate the 1980 State Beef Show: ; Ernie Frey is the 15 year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Frey of R 2 Quarryville. (Turn to Page A4l) many honors and placed well' incompetition. When asked if she would •rather be doing something' else than spending her time showing sheep, Herr com mented it takes a lot of her time but she would rather be (Turn to Page A 24) Ernie Frey of R 2 Quarryville took the gi*hnd championship. Doug Parrot of the show judge, is,on the left. Farm groups, industry decry U.S. grain embargo BY CURT HAULER LITITZ Every major Jlaj-m.' i - organization representing local fanners, and several agribusiness groups, have slammed President'Carter’s decision to embargo grain sales to Russia. Carter said the U.S. will not sell, the Russians 17 million tons of grain in ex cess of the amount we are committed to sell. The embargo was called in retaliation for the Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanistan. The Russians, suffering a severe crop shortage, were expected to buy at least that amount of grain from U.S. farmers. Depsite the President’s assurances he would take steps to see the U.S. farmer was protected against financial loss, most local farm groups issued statements opposing the ' embargo. Farm Bureau, the Penn sylvania Grange, PennAg Industries Association, the Fertilizer Institute, and-the FarmersTJnion all said they'. were upset by the embaigo. - Allan Grant, American' Farm Bureau Federation President, said cutting off wheat and other farm In this issue SECTION A: Editorials, 10; Chester Whites, 14; Jerseys, 15; Opening day, 16; Brown Swiss, 26; Vegetable show, 36; Circle of champions, 44. SECTION B: Dairy Assn, meets, 2; commodity booths, 6; food competition, 9; Berks forestry, 11; com champs, 12; Ask VMD, 14; Guernsey meeting, 15. SECTION C: Homestead notes, 2; Joyce Bupp, 10; Belgians, 'll; No-till meeting, 16; Lebanon DHfA, 24; Landraceshow,2B; Farm Talk, 32; Red Rose FFA, 34. BY DICK WANNER HARRISBURG - Grand View Farms, a brand new dairying venture which filled their bam in Middletown this past May, got off to a roaring start in the show ring by cap turing grand championships in both Holstein and Guern sey breeds at the Penn sylvania Farm Show. And to cap that achievement, the top Holstein was named Supreme Champion, the first year that title has been bestowed on any cow at the Farm Show. The herd is the result of a collaboration between a trio of dairymen with a vision of building an outstanding breedmg herd. Maxwell Perry, the man who led the supreme champion into the _ ring, has been a diaryman all his adult life, first in Ken tucky, then in Indiana. Norman Craig, the other herdsman, was as immersed $7.00 Per year commodity exports to the Soviet Union would be- un ' wise and self-defeating. He was speaking to the group’s annual convention in Phoenix, Arizona. “Other, more effective methods of' political and economic retaliation are available to this and other North Atlantic Treaty nations to protest the Soviet (Turn to Page A 45) ' in the Guernsey breed as Perry was in black and whites. And Marvin Miller, who owns Grand View Farms, has had a life-long dream of developing a top-notch breeding herd. After he had' hung his armload of prize banners in the dairy barn, Perry talked about their plans for the herd. “We intend to make half our money by selling breeding stock,” he said. “The milk is going to pay the bills, of course, but the sale of good animals is going to be important to us.” All the cows in the herd were bought at dispersal sales, Perry pointed out. The Holsteins all came from Pen nsylvania, while the Guern seys have come from half-a dozen in the South and the Midwest. For a breeder, a win from ** (Turn to Page A 43)