BlO—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 10,1983 I WE HAVE A WINNER! After receiving more than 100 entries, we have a winner for our ‘‘Fall Weather” contest. Etta Shirk, 13-year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Shirk, Ephrata E 4, came up i| v Learning how to make pizza and milkshakes was a highlight of 4-H day camp at the University of Delaware. Here, Elizabeth Haldeman, Elkton, Md. carefully measures ingre dients under the watchful eye of EFNEP nutrition aide Pearl Gatewood. •vSSSSP I . &LACK 2. REP 5. Ybuow 4-, BLUE 5. &ROWM tulip tree* rmscm- FUL TREE /S 7AE TALLEST BROAD LEAFEP 7PBBW WE (JM/TEO STATES. If GROWS 70 A UE/6MTOF ALMOST ZOO BEET. ZT/S 7MB STATE TREEOPT NOS* AM A ReMTUCMTAMP TEM* NESSES. THE YELLOW BLOS SOMS OF THIS TREE RESEM BLE TULIPS. TMEfAREA SOURCE OF FOOPFORBEES. with about 240 words. "I learned different words 1 didn’t really know before,” Etta said, "I worked on it in the evenings after the day’s work was done." Etta will be in eighth grade at Pleasant V 6. ORAM6E 7. GREEN) 8. LT-BROWN) 9. LT BLUE 10. LT. GREEN) s Kids to College &-'B-83 Valley Pan School. She lives acre dairy farm. Thanks to eve: who sent us an They all looked Another contest coming soon! NEWARK, Del. One hundred fifty area youngsters spent a recent week at the University of Delaware learning about everything from kites to com puters. It was all part of a new program in 4-H day camping. Camp at the university was much more than a babysitting service. Faculty and staff of the College of Agricultural Sciences taught minicourses in their specialties, from insect collecting to engine repair. Volunteer 4-H leaders and others shared their expertise in fields like phot6graphy, outdoor cookery, sewing, computers, and new games. Swimming, campfires, and singing gave some of the flavor of Camp Barnes in Sussex County, where Delaware 4-H holds its annual overnight camp. Ten-year-old Richard Fuester, Reward, was enthusiastic about learning how to develop film in his photography class, and how to build a working rocket and kite in his aerospace class. Thirteen-year-old Angela (Turn to Page B 12) G* three-month-old Alpine goat walked away with reserve cham pion honors at the recent Elizabethtown Fair. Heather lives on Teat Treat Farm, Peach Bottom, where she and her family raise 25 goats.