Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, May 22, 1993, Image 26

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    A2Hjnc—nr FwwtoQ. imnUy, my aa, 1993
I
NAME:
I ADDRESS:
I COUNTY:
Select Which School You Will Attend
WESTERN: Held in Crawford County, July 5 & 6
EASTERN: Held in Berks County, July 9 & 10
I have enclosed $.
I have enclosed $.
(FEE SCHEDULE: $25 per overnight participant includes schools cost, room and an evening meal; $l5 per commuter includes
evening meal; $5 off per second additional child attending from the tame immediate family.)
SEND RESERVATION FORM WITH CHECKS PAYABLE TO
Pa. Holstein Association
839 Benner Pike
State College, PA 16801
PDCA Announces Judging Conference
STATE COLLEGE (Centre
Co.) The Pennsylvania
Purebred Dairy Cattle Association
this week announced details for its
1993 Annual Judging Conference,
to be held in Lebanon County July
7-8.
According to association offi
cials, participants will have the
opportunity to judge Brown Swiss,
Holstein, Guernsey and Ayrshire
I
1993 Purebred Dairy Cattle Association
Judging Conference Reservation Form
(Deadline Is June 15)
< NAME:
I ADDRESS:
1 PH (
ME:
The Conference is to be held in Lebanon County July 7 and July 8. The cost Is $4O and
covers conference costs and lunch on both days. Participants will have the opportunity to
judge Brown Swiss, Holstein, Guernsey, and Ayrshire dairy cattle. To register, fill out the
form and send payment. For more information, call Ken Raney, secretary of the Purebred
Dairy Cattle Association at (814) 234-0364.
SEND RESERVATION FORM WITH CHECKS PAYABLE TO:
PA PDCA
839 Benner Pike
State College, PA 16801
Dairy Pasture Walks Set
SOUTHAMPTON (Bucks
Co.) Twelve contestants will
compete in Atlantic Dairy
Cooperative’s 1993 Outstanding
Young Cooperator contest, which
will be held June 17-18 at the Turf
Valley Hotel and Country Club in
Ellicott City, Md.
During the contest, the Young
Cooperators will participate in per
sonal interviews and table topic
discussions. Five winners, includ
ing the Outstanding Young
Registration Begins For
1993 Pa. Jr. Holstein Association
Judging School Reservation Form
(Deadline is June 26)
as an overnight participant,
as a commuting participant.
dairy cattle during the two-day
conference.
The school official is to be Jason
Myers, a Holstein breeders from
New Windsor, Md.
The cost for the conference is
$4O and covers conference costs
and lunch for both days.
Those interested in participating
should fill out and send a registra
tion form along with payment to:
Cooperators, will be selected by a
panel of three judges.
Judging is based on knowledge
of cooperatives and the dairy
industry, leadership, speaking
ability and poise.
This year's contestants include
Sheld and Tami Miller, of Bangor,
representing District 1; Joe and
Cindy Doak, Woodstown, N.J.,
District 2; Richard and Loretta
Savidge, Mcnztown, District 8;
Daniel and Brenda Rice, Kempton,
Pa. Jr. Judging Schools
1 STATE COLLEGE (Centre reflccl davcl differences.
I Co.) The Pennsylvania Hols- For tho »® who n®®? overnight
I tein Association this week accomodations the fee is $25. That
! announced most of the details for includes school costs, the hotel
its 1993 Junior Holstein Schools. n»m and evening meal.
I There are two judging schools, For tf lo *® who l‘ v ® c * ose enough
1 each two days in duration, offered J° commute, the cost of the school
I to all junior members, regardless ■* 515. which covers the cost of the
1 of cattle-breed affiliation. school and an evening meal,
j Though location of the schools Th' s y®* l ’’ • second member of
I changes every year, a west site and *be f amd y who attends the same
I an eastern site are selected to pro- school will receive $5 off of their
I vide a reasonable opportunity for registration cost
all youth to attend. Each school starts noon the first
For this year, the specific loca- day and ends noon the second day.
dons for the schools are yet to be T**® l ® af ® lo be between eight to 12
determined. Ken Raney, director classes of cattle to be judged and
of member relations for the Pa. instructors will attempt to cover all
Holstein Association, said the to® basics of judging cattle,
hotels and meeting places will be
announced within die next several
weeks.
However, the general location
of the western school will be
Crawford County, while the east
ern school is to be held in Berks
County.
The western school is to be held
Monday and Tuesday, July 5 and
July 6; the eastern school is set for
Friday and Saturday, July 9 and
July 10.
School officials are to be Steve
Shaw, of Williamsburg, for the
western school, and Gary Rogers,
of Penn State University, for the
east
PHONE:
Pa PDCA, 839 Benner Pike, State
College PA 16801, by June IS.
According to Ken Raney, direc
tor of member relations for the
Pennsylvania Holstein Associa
tion which also serves as the admi
nistrative headquarters for the
PDCA, those needing more infor
mation should write to him at the
same address, or call (814)
234-0364.
1
District 9; John and Penny Garber,
Waynesboro, District 10; Jim and
Debra Krantz, Quarryvillc, Dis
trict 12; Ronald and Jane Reese,
Port Matilda, District 13; Evan and
Lori Burkholder, Fayetteville,
District 15; Gary and Gail Tho
man, Dallastown, District 16;
Logan Bower, Blain, District 18;
Gary and Claudia Bechtel, Cur
rville. District 20; and Robert and
Beverly Stanton, Clcarville, Dis
trict 21.
The fee schedule for the schools
are identical, and are designed to
Gift Will Endow
Faculty Chair
UNIVERSITY PARK (Centre
Co.) A Penn State alumnus
who says America must protect its
world leadership in agricultural
productivity has committed
$730,000 to Penn State’s College
of Agricultural Sciences.
C. Lee Rumberger of Pitts
burgh, a former vice president
with HJ. Heinz Co., made the do
nation to endow a faculty chair
that will boost the college’s re
search programs. The chair will be
funded through a combination of
lifetime gifts and an estate note. It
will build on a professorship that
Rumberger endowed with a
$250,000 donation in 1987.
“Lee Rumbcrger has long re
cognized that our nation’s leader
ship in agriculture has rested on a
strong commitment to research,”
said Lamartine F. Hood, dean of
the College of Agricultural Sci
ences. “Research is the key to en
suring a high quality, safe and nu
tritious food supply.”
Rumberger, who once served as
vice president for research at
Heinz, said, “I know from person
al experience how important re
search is to the entire agricultural
industry. We can’t afford to be
complacent. We must always be
looking for better products and
more efficient ways of doing
things. My hope is that the Rum
berger chair will play an important
role in that area.”
The C. Lee Rumberger and
Family Chair in Agricultural Sci-
MILK.
IT DOES A
bodygood:
Included in the instruction will
be type evaluation, terminology,
class breakdowns and how to
effectively give reasons. Each per
son in attendance will have an
opportunity to work one-on-one
with an experienced judge on rea
sons giving.
All junior members, regardless
of cattle-breed affiliation, are
invited to attend. Furthermore, the
schools are also open to 4-H and
FFA members.
The deadline for registration is
June 26. For more information,
call or write: the Pennsylvania
Holstein Association, 839 Benner
Pike, State College PA 16801,
(814) 234-0364.
ences will be appointed by the
dean and could be located in any
of the college’s academic units.
“The Rumbergcr chair will help
us to recruit and retain a world
class faculty member, who in turn
will attract superior students,”
said Hood.
A Warriors Mark native. Rum
bcrgcr was graduated ftom"Penn
State in 1920 with a bachelor’s de
gree in animal husbandry and
served as county agent in Fayette
County for eight years. He joined
Heinz in 1929 and worked his way
through management ranks, be
coming vice president for research
and quality control in 1951.
Named vice president for devel
opment in 1961, he helped start
Heinz operations in the Nether
lands, Italy and Mexico, and was
president and treasurer of the
company’s Mexican subsidiary.
He retired in 1965.
Rumbcrgcr has long been active
in alumni affairs in the College of
Agricultural Sciences. In 1968, he
became founding president of the
college’s alumni society and in
1974 the college named him an
Alumni Fellow.
Rumbcrger has served on the
governing boards of many agricul
tural organizations, including the
agricultural board of the National
Research Council and the Agricul
tural Research Institute, affiliated
with the National Academy of
Sciences.
Penn State honored him as a
Distinguished Alumnus in 1960.