p|«NS VLVAjSif A ii I. ■ ■T llMill II VOL. 38 No. 8 Convenience Rather Than Diet, Health Issues Top Beef Consumer Demands ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Farming Staff NOTTINGHAM (Chester Co.) —Some farmers may believe con sumers are more worried about cholesterol than they are conveni ence. The chairman of the Pen nsylvania Beef Council believes otherwise. What drives purchases of beef and other food products isn’t diet, health, or other issues, according to Dennis Byrne, but convenience. Based upon a survey before the Council’s planning session rccen dy, results proved that consumers prefer convenience over cholester ol. “A lot of us got shocked,” Byme said. “The results of the survey showed that the consumer’s number one preference for buying is convenience. Number two is variety. Number three became diet/health, and issues were way down there. Farm Show Issue Next 4 (Early Deadlines Listed) Ncxi week Lancaster /arm ing’s annual special Pennsylvania Farm Show issue is dedicated to everyone who makes this event successful This week, for those who like to make plans early, you will find schedules, floor plans, and exhibitor locations on Pages A-29 and D 2-5. To prepare for the Farm Show late in the week, our office will have early deadlines. These dead lines arc as follows: Public Sale Ads Noon, Mon., 1/4. Mailbox Markets Noon, Mon., 1/4. General News Noon, Wed., 1/6. Clasificd Section C Ads 5 p.m., Tue., 1/5. All Other Classified Ads 9 a.m., Wed. 1/6. Reviewing the Old, Looking Forward To The New Year lOU ANN GOOD Lancaster Farming Staff EPHRATA (Lancaster Co.) The New Year is always a time to reflect on the past and a time to look forward to new challenges. With this in mind, we asked several of the people who we featured dur ing the past year in Lancaster Farming to share the biggest changes they had faced in 1992 and tell us what they look forward to in 1993. For Barbara Grumbine, Myer stown, the past year overflowed with changes. “But things ran smoothly,” said Barbara, who lives in Washington D.C. during week days and returns to the farm to be with her husband and two sons for the weekends. Four Sections Beef Council Chair Announces New Year Promotions “Now, if you talk to farmers, they put issues and diet/health at the top, because issues are the ones they hear about, and it hits them. And we remember it” In an interview conducted at Herr Angus Farm (which used to be a seedstock farm of purebred Angus, but now is simply a beef finishing operation), Dennis Byrne spoke about the future drives and directives of the Pennsylvania Mifflin Extension Holds Annual Meeting GAIL STROCK Mifflin Co. Correspondent LEWISTOWN (Mifflin Coun ty) Leaders and friends of the Mifflin County Cooperative Extension Association gathered recently for their annual banquet meeting held in the social hall of the Ellen Chapel Methodist Church. President Marlin Aurand pres ided over the meeting that included comments from Exten- In February 1992, Barbara was appointed Northeast area director of the agricultural stabilization and conservation service of the USDA. ‘There was so much to learn,” Barbara said. Her day started at six a.m. It took about 25 minutes for her to walk I'/j miles from her apartment to her job where she worked until 5:30 and sometimes 6:30 p.tn. Barbara almost always took home reading material. “It’s always so much to leam. I could be there 50 years and not know it all. There are changes every day. Con gress passes laws and our agency writes up ways to implement them and approve staff and changes.” (Turn to Page B 2) Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 2, 1993 Manages Herr Angus Byrne, who manages Herr Angus Farm (owned and operated by the Herr Snack Food Products Company), said a classical exam sion Director David Filson, Reg ional Director Mary Jo Depp, and the Dean of Penn State’s College of Agricutlrual Sciences Dr. Lar martine Hood. The 1992 minutes were read by secretary Vivian Mowery, followed by the treasur er’s report by John Czemiakows ki. Marion Barr and Elrose Click presided over the election of officers. Filson introduced the extension staff and secretaries, compliment ing the cooperative effort of all. He awarded Marlin Aurand a cer tifcate of appreciation for 14 years of service on the Extension Board as well as service at the state and regional levels. Marion Barr, Jim Hostetter, John Tedeschi, Geraldine Van Art, Helen Sunderland, and Viv ian Mowery received certificates (Turn to Pago A 22) Pa.DHIA Receives High Scores STATE COLLEGE (Centre Co.) The Pennsylvania Dairy Herd Improvement Association received outstanding scores re cently on its annual quality certifi cation evaluation by National DHIA. The association again ranked extremely high in its laboratory operation with 99 out of 100 points. This evaluation makes it the foremost DHIA laboratory in the northeastern United States, and one of the highest ranking labs pie of how issues really fare in the mind of consumers is Alar, a pesti cide once used on apple crops. Apple producers know what Alar is, but the consumer may have for Beef Council. From left, Byrne, holding Sharon, 3 with wife Dottle. Not pictured are Adam, 7, and Becky, 9. Photo by Andy Andrews. Elected to serve as 1993 officers of the Mifflin County Cooperative Extension Association are, from left, Helen Kirk, treasurer; Vivian Mowery, secretary; and John Czer niakowski, vice president. Absent was newly elected presi dent Joan Yoder. in the entire country. DHIA members and others us ing the PA DHIA lab in State Col lege can rest assured that their test results are accurate whether the milk analysis is for fat, protein, solids-non-fat, or somatic cell. Equipped with the latest tech nology in the milk analysis field, the lab has scored a perfect 100 percent on all National DHIA un known (blind) sample analyses on all lab machines for the last five months. This perfect rolling ma 608 Per Copy gotten. “You talk to a consumer, you’ll be lucky to find 20 percent of them know what Alar is," he said. (Turn to Page A 18) chine average score is almost un heard of in the industry and ranks the PA DHIA lab far higher than most of the other labs in the coun try. In field operations, the associa tion also scored extremely well earning 111 out of 100 points needed for certification. Seventy-five points are needed for certification. The additional points earned above 100 are bonus points earned for voluntarily ex- (Turn to Page A2l) $19.00 Per Year