A24-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 17, 1993 COLLEGE PARK, Md. Every year, on the fourth Saturday in April, College of Agriculture students alert their peers and Washington, D.C. area commuters to the fact that farm animals still are part of scene on the urban-ori ented University of Maryland campus at College Park. As it has for two-thirds of a cen tury, this year’s Student Ag Day on April 24 will attempt to convey the atmosphere and traditions of a country fair in an urban setting. Most activities will center on the livestock bams area, behind the Institute for Physical Science and Technology, at the inlersec iton of Regents Drive and Farm Drive. The event will run from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. There is no admis sion charge. Typical of country fairs, Ag Day will feature student competi tion in fitting and showing dairy cattle, beef cattle, swine, and sheep. Meanwhile, student riders from the nationally famous Mary land Cavalry Regiment will per form nearby. By 2:30 p.m. the winners in each livestock class will be ex changing animals to determine 5" Barn Brush • polyester bristles for all stains and paints (653-298) sQgg Reg $l4 99 w Exterior Oil MWMV Agway Aluminum Exterior Oil Paint • reflects the sun's heat and keeps the surface temperature cooler (650-083) 5 gal SCQ99 Reg $B9 99 Ow SAVE NOW THROUGH APRIL AVAILABLE AT THE FOLLOWING L( G & G AGWAY Manheim, PA 717-665-6122 maas u WAYom#liks Student Ag Day At Maryland Set who deserves the honor of being selected grand champion show man. University of Maryland fa culty members and alumni - with little or no previous experience - will compete at 1 p.m. in a humor filled swine showmanship contest. Barbecued beef hamburgers, chicken hot dogs, and the famous University of Maryland ice cream will be sold throughout the day by College of Agriculture student clubs. Bedding plants and vegeta ble transplants will be sold by the University of Maryland student chapter of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers. Barnyard babies from the Balti more Zoo will be included in a farm animal petting zoo for chil dren in the new lobby addition to the Animal Sciences Building on the College Park campus. The Ag Day official program booklet each year carries a sur prise tribute honoring a College of Agriculture faculty member. This year’s booklet is dedicated to a College of Agriculture adminis trator. Ag Day is sponsored each year by the Agriculture Student Coun cil at the University of Maryland, Easy light' Aluminum Extension Ladders • automatic hood locks • rubber-based swivel safety feet (654-167) I 16’, maximum D working jffi length 13' Hi Reg $B9 99 IL *79" H Coleman Powermate • 1200 psi of cleaning power • includes 23' high-pressure hose, squeeze-grip wand, detergent/wax injection tube (945-502) $ ~p QOO Reg $399 99 WCW HENRY B. HOOVER, INC. Ephrata, PA 717-733-6593 with cooperation from other stu dent organizations in the College of Agriculture. This year’s planning committee coordinator is Kathleen W. Bauer of Picketts Comer, near Wood bine (Carroll County). Bauer is a University of Maryland senior, majoring in general agriculture. She works with her brother, Ken neth W. Bauer, Jr., in a swine operation. Gary E. Scibcl, an agricultural engineering senior, is president of the Ag Student Council. Seibel grew up in the Knollwood section of Adelphi (Prince George’s County). Jerry V. Deßarthe of North Laurel (Prince George’s County) is a longtime advisor for Ag Day and the Ag Student Council. De- Barthe is an associate professor of animal sciences at the University of Maryland. Deßarthe sees the Ag Day fit ting and showing competition as an opportunity for student partici pants to acquire something more than textbook knowledge about the care and handling of farm ani mals. He also notes that this year’s The Lincoln Intermediate Unit No. 12 Migrant Child Development Program, LIUMCDP, provides supplemental education for children of migratory farmworkers. The goal is to enhance and enrich migrant children’s lives through academic achievement, positive self concepts, and an awareness of available career opportunities. Through these services, children become empowered to succeed. In return, parents attain a better self image about themselves that becomes evident in their work performance. LIUMCDP is dually funded, receiving monies from the state and federal government. LIUMCDP, one of 5 migrant sites in Pennsylvania, serves 31 counties in the south-central part of the state. LIUMCDP serves children whose parents/guardians 1. work or have worked In seasonal or temporary agricultural employment 2. have moved across school district or state boundaries within the last 6 years. In Pennsylvania, agricultural employment includes: dairy farming, tomato, vegetable and fruit harvesting; poultry and food processing: and lumbering. Specially trained recruiter/community liaisons locate, identify and enroll eligible children. They also disseminate useful information about local resources and provide follow up sup port services as needed. We enroll children from birth through the age of 22 if they have not yet graduated from high school. LIUMCDP programs vary according to need and migrant concentration per county. Overall, programs include: Daycare/Preschool Kindergarten Centers: Public School - tutorial intervention: English As A Second Language: Summer School Enrichment, Summer Career Education and Summer Intensive Language Programs; In-Home Summer Regression Prevention; and Parents as Tutors Program. Children are served throughout the state based on assessed need. If you employ hired hands on your farm, please call our office. They may be eligible for Important educational benefits. For more Information, contact: Parker C. Coble, Director, Lincoln Intermediate Unit No. 12, 65 Billerbeck Street, New Oxford, PA 17350, (717) 624-4616 [TONI Ivah Johnson, Western Liaison, 31 West 3rd Street Rear, Everett, PA 15537, (814) 652-9031 Gettysburg Field Office, Migrant Child Development, 52 Foth Alfey, Gettysburg, PA 17325 (717) 334-0006 show informally kicks off a “Part ners in Education” joint program that permits College of Agricul ture students at the University of Maryland to gain practical experi ence in working with animals at the U.S. Department of Agricul ture’s nearby Beltsville Agricul tural Research Center. Earlier this year, the University of Maryland sheep flock, housed for many years at College Park, was eliminated because of a dis ease outbreak. So arrangements were made to hold the Ag Day sheep fitting and showing compe tition at 9 a.m. on April 24 in the Sheep Nutrition Bam (Building 435 A), - formerly known as the Goat Bam, - at the Beltsville loca tion. The winner will compete that afternoon for grand champion showmanship honors with the Attention Farmers With Hired Laborers EDUCATIONAL ENHANCEMENT for Children of Hired Laborers other livestock winners at College Park. Thomas E. Mullinix of Dayton (Howard County) will be the offi cial sheep showmanship judge Mullinix is sheep flock manager at the Beltsvillc Agricultural Re search Center. Bonnie Graves Remsberg of Middletown (Frederick County) will judge the dairy cattle show manship competition. She and her husband, Thomas D. Remsberg, are Holstein breeders. William N. Gregg, Jr,, of Woodfield (Montgomery County) will be the beef show judge Gregg and his father arc former Angus cattle breeders. Kenneth W. Bauer, Jr., of Woodbine (Carroll County) will judge the swine showmanship contest. tffl 1 VUSINESS wmH&up? AOVCmKC IN Twi NEWSFXPtP! « V) V ti ~ - >*-*- laS