Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, October 18, 1980, Image 14

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    Al4—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 10,1980
HARRISBURG
Christine Sunday of York
County recently participated
in the 21st Inter-Collegiate
and Junior Livestock
Judging Contest, part of the
Keystone International
Livestock Exposition held
here at the Farm Show
Complex.
As a member of the
Pennsylvania 4-H team,
made up of four 4-H’ers from
York County, Chris brought
honors to her team and to
herself in swine judging.
Chris Sunday receives her trophy for first place
individual in swine judging from Ben Morgan,
chairman of KILE.
Strauss brothers
sweep
carcass
HARRISBURG - The two
Strauss brothers from R 1
Ephrata, Lancaster County,
swept the carcass com
petition at the Keystone
International Livestock
Exposition with their twc
barrows.
Robert Strauss’s barrow
bung as the grand champion
on the rail, while brother
Steve’s barrow hung next as
the reserve grand champion.
Steve’s barrow had been
tagged on-foot as the reserve
champion barrow of the
Junior show.
In the beef carcass class,
the Sunmental crossbred
steer exhibited by Lucy
Hallouvell wearing neck brace
HARRISBURG Penrose
Hallowell, State Secretary of
Agriculture, will be required
to wear a neck brace for
approximately six weeks as
a result of injuries sustained
in an accident last week.
Hallowell received a
fractured vertebrae, the
sixth located between his
shoulder blades, in the
mishap on October 7. His
wife, Irish, suffered a
broken collar bone.
The secretary has been
troubled with numbness in
bis left shoulder through his
Sunday
The daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Sunday won
the distinction of High
Sewing Individual in Junior
Swine Judging. She had a
score of 240 points out of a
possible 250.
Chris’s teammate, Laurie
Dobrosky, followed in
second place in Junior In
dividual Swine Judging.
And, with Brenda Walter of
Airville adding her score in
the contest with her team
mates’, the Pennsylvania 4-
KILE
contest
Fought, Carlisle was tagged
grand champion on the rail.
The reserve grand
champion on the rail had
been the grand champion
steer on-foot. It was
exhibited by the Harry
Molitor family of Fayet
teville, Ohio.
In the market lamb
division, the first place lamb
on the rail was the on-foot
grand champion exhibited
by Johnson Brothers of
Hillsboro, Ohio. The second
place lamb was the
Shropshire entry of Douce
Farm, Washington Court
House, Ohio.—SM
arm and hand as a result of
the fractured vertabrae. The
neck brace unmobolizes the
shoulder and neck area to
permit healing of the
fracture.
The accident occurred in
Susquehanna Township,
Dauphin County. The
Hallowell car was struck by
a township cruiser engaged
in hot pursuit of another
vehicle.
Both were hospitalized
following the mishap. The
secretary has since returned
to work.
tops swine judging at KILE
H team was named the High
Team in Swine Judging.
Brenda was the only
member of the Pennsylvania
4-H team to place in the top
five in Cattle Judging as an
individual. She scored 304
points to take fifth place. Her
efforts in placing Hie classes
of cattle, sheep and swine
earned Brenda the honor of
placing tenth overall in the
Junior competition.
Leroy Bowles, Red Lion,
was the fourth member of
the team.
The team placed fifth in
the overall competition.
Pennsylvania’s Junior
FFA team also had a good
day. The team, made up of
William Wylie, Tom Herr
and Jeff McConn, had the
second place score in cattle
judging in the Junior
competition.
Wylie was the second high
individual in the cattle
judging division, scoring 315
points. His combined scores
for judging all three species
earned him the rank of third
high individual in the Junior
contest.
Ten teams competed in the
Junior contest representing
nine states: Kentucky,
Maryland, Michigan,
Minnesota, North Carolina,
Ohio, Virginia, Connecticut
and Pennsylvania.
In the Inter-Collegiate
competition, Penn State’s
team can in fifth overall.
Steve Upperman was
seventh in the Individual
scoring, and he placed fifth
in Swine.
Teammade Brian Keister
came in second in scores for
Inter-Collegiate Sheep
Judging which helped the
Penn State team on its way
to placing second only to
Purdue in sheep judging
down by only two points. The
Penn State team came in
fifth in cattle judging.
Twelve collegiate teams
competed in the judging
contest.
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The Penn State Collegiate livestock judging team ranked fifth in the 21st Inter-
Collegiate Contest. Pictured, from' left, are Coach Erskine Cash, Steve Up
perman, Gary Guitare, Sue Davis, Bob Maxwell, Linda Ebaugh, Brian Keister,
Tom Templeton, and Bob Grove, assistant coach.
The Pennsylvania Junior 4-H team placed first in the swine judging com
petition during the 21st Junior Livestock Judging Contest held during KILE.
Pictured are, from left Coach William Holloway, Chris Sunday, Brenda Walter,
Leßoy Bowles, Laurie Dobrosky, and Anthony Dobrosky, York County Agent.
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