K l\l » ■ Bl | Hfl B^B VOL. 27 No. 3 Eckel wins PFA’s president’s post Lackawanna County’s K£ith Eckel, right, became the youngest elected president in PFA history on Wednesday when he defeated Franklin County’s D. Eugene .Cayman for* the past. Gayman, left, was reelected vice president. c Dauphin 4-H’er takes championship BY DEBBIE KOONTZ LANCASTER —Dauphin County 4-H’ers had eauseto celebrate Tuesday at tbeSoutheast District Baby Beef Show andSaleas Judge Bill Holloway of Seven Valleys; York: County, named one of their co-members, Dwayne Afessick, Grand 'Champion Steer .title holder. Dwayne, the son of Alvin and Fern Mesaick of JR4 Elizabethtown sold the 1215-pound Cbianina Angus cross to the Lancaster Stockyards, host of the event, for |2 per pound more than a dollar above the ' average which rested at 72.31 cents per pound. 1 Although Dwayne says he thought he would do well, he ad- mits to being a little surprised at -his accomplishments. He has 21 head of cattle on the 114-acre farm near Hershey he operates with bis dad. According to Dauphin Extension agent, Fred Rudy, this is the first tune Dauphin County has gone home with the Grand Champion award. Leaving the sbowring with Reserve Champion honors was a Lancaster Countian Tracey Landis of Quarryville. Tracey, the daughter of Jun and Linda Landis, sold her 1230-pound Purebred Angus to Wilmer Kreider, known as Willie the Butcher. Through her tears of sadness, which stemmed from having to say goodbye to her steer, Tracey watched as Kreider bid her steer up to $1.06 per pound. Tracey purchased the steer from Sam Wylie of Nottingham in April. Two special awards were donated preceding the sale to this year’s top showpeople for Lan caster County, as named at Monday’s county show: —An Angus Chianma crossbred At .the District Beef Show and Side calf was donated by the In telligencer Journal daily newspaper of Lancaster to Deb Greider, top showpei'son. The Intell. annually presents the county’s top showmanship winner with * calf who in turn will raise it and. show it-in next .year’s com petition. The presentation was made by Intell editor William Schultz. —Chris Little, who placed as reserve champion showman received a $3OO check donated by Lancaster Fanning newspaper. The check was presented by Dwayne Messick of R 2 Elizabethtown sold his Grand Champion steer, weighing in at 1,215 pounds, to the Lan caster Stockyards at Tuesday’s district baby beef show and sale. Holding the blue ribbon is Lancaster Stockyards president William McCoy, left. Lancaster Farming, Satyrday, November 14,1981 BY SHEILA MILLER HERSHEY) In what was probably the most hotly contested election in the recent history of the Pennsylvania Farmers' Association, voting delegates from across the Commonwealth cast their ballots to elect Lackawanna Countlan Keith Eckel as president of the 23,376-member family farm organization. The youngest PFA president ever elected, Eckel, at age 34, defeated PFA vice president D. Eugene Gayman of Franklin County who also was actively seeking the highest seat in PFA. The Hershey Convention Cen ter's delegate session room was packed with PFA members and other interested bystanders as the election process commenced Wednesday. An anticipative electricity seemed to be generated in the spacious room as several onlookers bemoaned the fact that pubhaherHobert G. Campbell who told the audience of buyers that sometimes there is a fine line between" first and second and Chris’ efforts should be rewarded. Receiving Champion Showman award at the round-up was a Chester County native, Sheila Fairbaim of West Chester. Sheila showed a 1105-pound Limousin crossbred which also captured top honors in the lightweight class. This winner, the daughter of Er nest and Ins Fairbaim, admits to (Turn to Page ABO) bets hadn’t been wagered on the outcome of the election. The PFA nominating committee spokesman announced that Eckel, the incumbent president who filled the post after the resignation of Eugene Thompson last August, and Gayman, the vice president, were their choices for the election. When no other nominations were forthcoming from the floor, the election process was in full swing. Both candidates bought the delegates and others in the room to their feet, applauding, las they delivered their reasons for seeking the office of PFA president. Gayman, a Franklin County dairyman, cited his commitment to public service with PFA being his first priority. His 20-plus years of service, he said, has helped him in preparing mentally and physically for the responsibilities of the office. “I have had the ex perience of coming up the PFA ladder and I didn’t miss many steps,” he declare^. Eckel, who operates a dairy and inside This Week’s... ■ Farmers from across the state gather for the annual meeting of the Pennsylvania Farmers Association to set policies and present awards...A32. Sellers and buyers huddle in a tent, oblivious to the weather, to watch the Willsholm Invitational - an all embryo transplant Holstein sale m Somerset County...A26. Lancaster’s Red Rose 4-H'ers and Dauphin's beef club •members hold their county round-ups. Find out more, on pages...DB and D 2. Rinehart Farms female draws $70,000 bid BY DONNA TOMMELLEO TANEYTOWN,. Md. - A Romandale Reflection Marquis daughter sold for $70,000 on Tuesday at the Rinehart Farms Holstein sale. Rinehart Oawfmette, a Very Good 80 out of m- ftwy Zimmerman’s Holstems, A 24; Bollmger’s DHIA record, A 22; Ayrshire Breeders, D 7; Bedford County DHIA Annual Report, DU; Huntsdale Stock Farms, D 23. Editorials, A 10; Now is the tune, A 10; That’s a good question. AM; Joyce Bupp’s column,'Bl2; Ladies, have you heard! B 14; Ida’s Notebook, B 19; Milk Check, 836; Farming’s Futures, D 5. $7.50 Per Year cash crop farm with his father and brother, confessed that seeking the presidency was the “most hum bling” experience of his life. In the final tally, the PFA delegates selected the incumbent president to continue in his role. Eckel will benefit from Cayman’s years of experience since the vice president was reelected for another term. Other PFA nominees for the office of vice president included Northampton County’s John Ackerman, Chester County’s Arthur Hershey, and Berks County’s John Koch. Eckel has been a member of PFA's State Board of Directors since 1976. In other farm-related service, he helped to found and served as a member on the State Board of the Pennsylvania Council of Cooperative' Extension Associations. He has been a director of the State Council of Farm Workers and served on the (Turn to Page A 32) ternationally-known Rinehart Apollo Oawfm, brought top bid from Pennsylvania breeder Charles Hershberger, Mar tmsburg. The 69 head of registered Holstems averaged $4,829 in the sale managed by R. Austin Backus, Inc. More than 1,000 prospective buyers crowded into the sale tent (Turn to Page Al 7) fkm ml forth Homestead Notes, B 2; Home on the Range, B 6; Kid's Komer, BIO; FWS calendar, B 12; FWS news, B 14; 4-H news, Bl 9,20; FFA news, B 30; New Holland beef and pig club, B 8; Lancaster Co. Farm Women, B 18; York Co. Farm Women, B 15; Lancaster lamb round-up, B 21; Tax Law, 829.