Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, November 30, 1985, Image 34

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    A34-Unca>t*r Fannins, Saturday, November 30,1985
V
ITHACA, NY - The Advisory
Council for Cornell Cooperative
Extension has five new members;
they represent Monroe, Niagara,
Oneida, Sullivan, and Warren
counties.
Appointed for a three-year term
are Robert R. Lehman of
Rochester, Agnes Printup of
Sanborn, Barbara Cowdery of New
Hartford, James Gorman of
Parksville, and Glenn L. Pearsall
of Johnsburg. Their appointments
were made by Lucinda A. Noble,
director of Cornell Cooperative
Extension.
Made up of 25 members selected
from among residents of New York
State, the advisory council advises
the director of Cornell Cooperative
Extension on program directions,
priorities, finances, and other
matters of concern to Cooperative
Extension Associations in coun
ties.
A partnership of county, state,
and federal governments, Cornell
Cooperative Extension has field
offices in each of the 62 counties.
Part of the New York State
College of Agriculture and Life
Sciences, the New York State
College of Human Ecology, and the
New York State College of
Veterinary Medicine, Cornell
Cooperative Extension reaches
residents of the state through its
diverse educational programs
designed to promote the quality of
life for all. Programs include home
economics, 4-H youth develop
ment, agriculture, sea grants, and
community issues.
Lehman, executive director of
the Monroe County Youth Ad
vocacy Program, is currently
serving as president of the
Cooperative Extension Association
of Monroe County and also as
president of the Center for Missing
Children and the Lakeview Heights
Community Inc. In addition, he is a
member of the board of directors
for the Black Seeds Inc., Educable
Inc., the Adam Walsh Resource
Center of Rochester, the Mental
Health Chapter of Rochester, the
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DEALER INQUIRIES INVITED
Five
new members named to Cornell extension board
National Council on Alcoholism tor
the Rochester area, and the Finger
Lakes Properties Inc.
Printup is a member of the 4-H
urban advisory committee of the
Cooperative Extension Association
of Niagara County and of the ad-
visory committee of the Cornell
American Indian Program.
Previously, she shared as
secretary of the Niagara County
roftpppfjttp Frtonsion
WASHINGTON - The U.S.
Department of Agriculture has
announced changes in its
pseudorabies control regulations
to give the livestock industry more
latitude in shipping swine in
terstate. The changes take effect
Dec. 12.
“In making these rule changes,
we’ve tried to establish a balance
between adequate protection
against the spread of pseudorabies
in swine and needless interference
in the movement of swine between
states,” said Bert W. Hawkins,
administrator of USDA’s Animal
and Plant Health Inspection
Service. We’ve been discussing
proposed revisions with the in
dustry since 1982.”
USDA’s pseudorabies
regulations and rules were
established to restrict the spread
Introducing
The New
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Branch Location
PH: 717-786-2173
RD 3. Box 91A
Quarry vide, PA 17566
2 miles West of
Georgetown on Furnace
Rd.
USDA revises regs on interstate swine shipping
and also as chairperson of the
association’s home economics
committee.
Cowdery, a realtor associate in
New Hartford, previously served
as secretary of the Cooperative
Extension Association of Oneida
County. She is currently a member
of the association’s board of
directors and personnel com
mittee. She also served on the
of pseudorabies, a virus disease
generally fatal to newborn pigs.
Swine can transmit the disease to
most other warmblooded animals,
but not to humans.
“The changes we’re now im
plementing clarify the currenty
regulations, remove in
consistencies and bring the
regulations in line with currenty
industry practices,” Hawkins said.
The changes will provide the
following:
- An alternate method for
removing swine herds from the
“known infected” classification.
- An alternate method for at
taining or regaining herd
“qualified pseudorabies-negative”
status.
- An improved method for
monitoring herds vaccinated for
pseudorabies.
association’s home economics
program committee and has been
a member and secretary of the
board of directors of the Utica
Family YMCA.
Gorman, a supervisor in the
Town of Neversink, is chairman of
the finance and administration
committees of the Sullivan County
Board of Supervisors. He has
served as the representative of the
- An alternate way for shippers
to move swine interstate to ap
proved livestock markets, feedlots
and quarantined herds.
Hawkins said five states - lowa,
Illinois, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin
and North Carolina - currently are
cooperating with USDA in pilot
projects to evaluate various
methods of combating the disease.
Tn addition. Hawkins said. Ohio
DON'T
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CLASSIFIED AD
Ph: 717-394-3047 or 717-626-1164
Sullivan County Board of Super
visors to the Cooperative Ex
tension Association of Sullivan
County.
Pearsall, an account executive for
E.F. Hutton & Co. in Glens Falls, is
president of the Cooperative
Extension Association of Warren
County. He is a member of the
Town of Minerva Planning
Commission and of the Johnsburg
Economic Development Council.
officials are conducting a
pseudorabies eradication program
in that state with USDA assistance.
The comment period on USDA’s
latest proposal on this topic closed
May 31. The 16 comments received
were carefully reviewed and
considered in drafting the final
revisions. These revisions are
scheduled to be published Nov. 14
in the Federal Register.