D4-Lancaster Fanning Saturday, July 19,1986 4-H'ers Prepare for State Days with York Livestock Judging Contest WELLSVILLE Sixty-seven contestants from six counties took part in the York TCounty 4-H Livestock Judging Contest on July 3. Held at Warrington Green Farms in Wellsville, the contest is staged as a practice session for 4- H’ers bound for State Achievement Days in August. The winning state team earns the honor to represent Pennsylvania at the National 4-H Livestock Judging Contest held at the North American International Livestock Expo in Louisville, Kentucky in November. York County teams took top honors in both the junior and senior divisions at the July 3 contest. York entrants also took high in dividual honors in both divisions, with Krista Rankin winning the senior division and Sandy Eisenhour placing first in the junior division. Contest rankings are given below. York Llvntock Judfing Senior Division Three Counties Compete In Regional BY JOYCE BUPP York Co. Correspondent YORK - Teams from three counties vied for honors on July 9 at the first-ever York County Regional 4-H Meats Judging Contest. Godfrey Brothers Meats, York RB, hosted the event, which brought into competition 18 in dividuals and teams from York, Berks, and Lancaster counties. High senior individual was Nancy Townsend, and high junior was Bradley Trowbridge. Both represented York County. York’s senior and junior entries also took top honors in the team competition. Senior team mem bers were Holly Crisamore, Nancy Townsend, and Joanne Rishel. Members of the junior team were Pa. Juniors Elected to American- International Charolais Positions ST. PAUL, Minn. - The 1986-87 officers for the American- International Junior Charolais Association were elected during the recent annual junior heifer show and leadership conference held June 23-27 in St. Paul, Minn. Selected as president of the youth group was Anita Geddes of Higbee, Mo. A Pennsylvania junior, Jan Waltz of Manheim, will serve as the vice president. Rounding out the slate are two Texas members, Kristi Carver of Dallas, and Meghan Casey of Ft. Worth. Kristi will serve as the Newly elected officers of AIJCA include (clockwise, lower left) Anita Geddes, president; Kristi Carver, secretary; Meghin Casey, treasurer; Jan Waltz, vice president. BEEF 1 Robbie Rohrer Chester 2 Melissa Trostle York 3 Anne Mary Frey Lancaster SHEEP 1 Tncia Musser Lancaster 2 Krista Rankin York 3 Robbie Rohrer SWINE 1 Lisa Hoover York 2 Emily Weaver Lan caster 3 Joe Garber Lancaster ORAL REASONS 1 Krista Rankin York 2 Melissa Trostle York 3 John Eaton York OVERALL INDIVIDUAL 1 Krista Rankin York 2 Robbie Rohrer Chester 3 Melissa Trostle York TEAMS Ist York 1 Krista Rankin 2 Melissa Trostle 3 John Eaton 2nd Chester 1 Robbie Rohrer 2 Tiffany Rohrer 3 Donna McCauley 3rd Lan caster 1 Jeff Craig 2 Emily Weaver 3 Tncia Musser Junior Division BEEF 1 Sandy Eisenhour York 2 Shelby Heagy Lebanon 3 Daryl Bomgardner Lebanon SHEEP 1 Chris Hunter Berks 2 Joyce Stough York 3 Michelle Sullivan Cumberland SWINE 1 Jason Krail Lebanon 2 Sonia Shearer York 3 Leah Byers Cumberland OVERALL INDIVIDUAL 1 Sandy Eisenhour York 2 Amy Eshelman Berks 3 Travis Werley Berks TEAMS Ist York 1 Sandy Eisenhour 2 Elizabeth Bishard 3 Joyce Stough 2nd Lebanon 1 Daryl Bumgardner 2 Jason Krail 3 Shelby Heagy 3rd Berks 1 AmyEsheiman 2 Travis Werley 3 Chris Hunter Bradley Trowbridge, Joyce Stough and Suzanne Bishard. The contest was patterned after the meats judging contest held annually during State 4-H Achievement Days. It included classes of beef and pork carcasses, hams, ribs and steaks, and the identification of 24 assorted cuts of meats. Judge was James Watkins of Penn State. Trophies and ribbons for winning individuals and teams were sponsored by the York County 4-H Beef, Sheep and Swine Clubs, York County Swine Producers Association, Rishel’s Landscaping of Seven Valleys, and Dunkard Valley Farms, Dallastown. Results of the contest follow: association’s secretary, and Meghan will be the group’s treasurer. In addition to the officers, juniors were elected to the 10- member board of directors. David Naser of Washington, Pa., was chosen as Area 7 board member. He will represent junior members in Pennsylvania, Virginia, New York, Maryland, Delaware and the New England states. The officers and board members help to plan and carry out activities for the 700- member national junior association. High senior team honors at York Livestock Judging contest went to York team made up of Melissa Trostle (left), John Eaton Jr., and Krista Rankin. Krista was high senior in dividual. Meats Judging Results Senior Division High Individual 1 Nancy Townsend York 2 Joanne Rishel York 3 Holly Crisamore York Teams 1 York (Nancy Townsend Joanne Rishel Holly Crisamore) 2 Lancaster (Doug Musser Mike Craig Tracey Landis Mark Price) 3 Berks (Kurt Fisher Kemanne Ranck) Identification 1 Joanne Rishel York 2 Nancy Townsend York 3 Holly Crisamore York Judging 1 Kurt Fisher Berks 2 Doug Musser Lan caster 3 Nancy Townsend York Reasons 1 Nancy Townsend York 2 Joanne Rishel York 3 Kurt Fisher Berks Junior Division High Individual 1 Bradley Trowbridge York 2 Joyce Stough York 3 Suzanne Bishard York Teams 1 Bradley Trowbridge 2 Joyce Stough Suzanne Bishard Identification 1 Bradley Trowbridge 2 Joyce Stough Suzanne Bishard Judging 1 Bradley Trowbridge 2 Joyce Stough Jennifer Calderazzo David Naser Performance Sale Slated STATE COLLEGE - The Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture’s Meat Animal Evaluation Center is making final preparations for the Bth Per formance Tested Ram and In vitational Ewe Sale, to be held Saturday, August 2, at 4 p.m. The sale will be held in the new Ag Arena complex which is directly adjacent to the MAEC. The sale will feature approximately 50 performance tested rams and a consignment of ewes Through 70 days on test 74 rams have an average daily gain of .89 Members of York's winning junior team were (left) Elizabeth Bishard, Sandy Eisenhour and Joyce Stough. Sandy was high individual junior. 4-H Meats Judging Mike Bankert, center, representing the host Godfrey Brothers Meats, presented meats judging high individual awards to Nancy Townsend and Bradley Trowbridge. Cornell Conference to Discuss Chicken ITHACA, NY - How do hens cooped up in wire cages in modern poultry houses feel about their living conditions? Can they be made more comfortable? If so, would they produce more eggs? A Cornell University study at tempting to answer these questions, and the possibility of improving immune systems in chickens through genetic engineering techniques are among topics to be discussed at the 1986 Cornell Poultry Conference at the Ithaca Holiday Inn July 30-31. Open to poultry farmers throughout the Northeast, the annual event is sponsored by Cornell Cooperative Extension and the New York State College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Cornell. Tested Ram for Aug. 2 pounds per day, with 25 of the rams still gaining in excess of a pound a day. On test are: eight junior Dorsets, eight fall Dorsets, two junior Rambouillets, one junior Targhee, seven junior and one fall Shropshires, two Columbias, one junior Oxford, 11 junior Hamp shires, one fall-born Hampshire, 31 junior Suffolks and one fall-bom Suffolk. For more information or to request a catalog call Glenn Eberly at (814)238-2527 or write to the Meat Animal Evaluation Center, 651 Fox Hollow Road, State College, PA 16803. a■' J Behavior Cornell poultry scientist Dan Cunningham, the conference chairman, will discuss his chicken behavior research and its im plications for poultry production and welfare at 8:30 a.m. Thursday, July 31. His talk will be followed by a presentation on immunogenetics and its potentials for poultry health by Rodney Dietert, an associate professor of immunogenetics at Cornell. Still another study ex plaining why farm-fresh eggs lose weight after leaving the farm - a legal issue confronting egg producers - will be discussed by Robert C. Baker, professor of food science and chairman of Cornell's Department of Poultry and Avian Sciences. For more information about the conference, contact Dan Cun ningham, 204 Rice Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-5601, or call (607) 255-3168.