A2B-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 5, 1993 LANCASTER (Lancaster Co.) Pamela Christine Laubenstine and Paul Joseph Plummer have been named recipients of Key stone Farm Credit, ACA’s two annual $3OO scholarships. Applicants for Keystone’s scholarships must be high school seniors, live in Keystone’s 13-county territory, and plan to major in the field of agriculture or agribusiness at a four-year college on a full-time basis. Pam Laubenstine is the daught er of Mr. and Mrs. Larry G. Laubenstine of Bethel. She will graduate from the Hamburg Area High School in June and plans to earn a bachelor’s in horticulture at Delaware Valley College. An outstanding student, Pam is in the top 2 percent of her class and has been inducted into the National Honor Society. A mem- The CLAAS® Quadrant 1100 big square baler—The new standard equipment for dairy farmers. sum ' f •* " All dairy farmers know that the denser the bale the better the bale. The 1100 delivers the den sity you want, along with the high production capacities and ease of handling you need. Its dense 32" x 20" x up to 79" bales inhibit spoilage by keeping air out. They retain quality be cause denser bales suffer less nutrient loss. Your cows know the importance of this. The Quadrant makes easy work of dry hay, haylage and silage crops — whatevery ou need. And because Quadrant bales are produced in flakes, they easily divide into smaller portions. That makes them easy to handle for feeding and bedding. CLAAS’s shaft-driven knot ters have earned a worldwide reputation for reliability and low Farm Credit Awards Scholarships Pamela Christine Laubenstine ber of the Spanish Club and the Senior High Chorus, she is FBLA treasurer and secretary of the Wil derness Club. Pam is also involved in her church youth group and teaches grades K through 2 in Sunday school. f w' maintenance. Other notable fea tures are its two-stage pre chamber, 71" wide pickup, pow erful transmission, heavy-duty worm gear, I OOOrpmpto, adjust able density, capacity tor up to 16 balls of sisal or plastic twine, and 4 dependable CLAAS shaft-driven knotters. High production capacities. Convenient handling. Dense bales. Quality bale silage. Incidentally, CLAAS quality is also available in a larger Quad rant model designed for com mercial operators. Call CLAAS now and raise your own standards. 800-368-1516 In U.S. and Canada ccr>nar UMRS THE HARVESTING SPECIALIST Paul Plummer is the son of John R. and Maxine L. Plummer of Chalfont. He is a senior at Central Bucks High School West and plans to major in animal science and biology in preparation for a career in veterinary medical research. Accepted in Penn State, the University of Tennessee, and Cornell, he has not yet decided which of the three he will attend. A 4-Her for 10 years, many of Paul’s projects involved dairy and dairy goats, he has won Key stone’s Farm Credit Award for outstanding achievement in dairy Paul Joseph Plummer goats for seven years. Paul has also held many leadership posi tions in 4-H Clubs and received numerous awards. He attended the Pennsylvania Governor’s School for Agricultural Sciences at Penn State last summer. Additionally, Mock (Continued from Page A 27) ture and the environment.” In a news release distributed Tuesday by Coy’s staff, it slates ‘The legislation was officially signed on May 20. The landmark legislation finally made its way to the governor’s desk after it sat idle in the Senate for two consecutive sessions. It was passed by the House both times.” However, Coy’s statement fail ed to mention that the previously House-approved bills were not acceptable by any of the state’s agricultural organizations. In fact, the current act is the result of negotiatipns which occured while House-approved versions at nutrient management were under review in the Senate Agricultural and Rural Affairs Committee. In an attempt to get the act passed last session Coy and others in the House took working drafts of proposals being negotiated by the agricultural and environmental groups and quickly introduced the he is a member of the marching and jazz bands at school, is active in his church, and is a member of the Methodist Youth Fellowship. Pam and Paul will each receive a $5OO check and a commemora tive plaque. Signing proposal as a rider on a Senate environmental educational bill. That draft was the basis for the wording of the act which is now law. Agriculture had been selected as a first taiget for seeking tighter controls because it is included among that class of suspected applicators of excessive nitrogen and other nutrients, and because it is an obvious applicator of nutrients. However, human manure, is also highly suspect as a non-point source of excessive nutrients, because of the number of on-lot septic systems and drainage fields, and the number of people as com pared to livestock. The proposed law directs that all nutrient sources be researched and solutions found. Also, the law effectively preempts local nutrient manage ment ordinances, which were beginning to be passed in different sub-county municipalities and which threatened to create a statewide hodgepodge of rules.