ta-uncww Fungi, s«unMy, Aprt an, iw4 p on ltry Science Club Holds Banquet Wampler Says Calif. ‘Pacesetters’ Each Consume 24 Pounds Of Turkey Per Year JUDITH PATTON Union Co. Correspondent STATE COLLEGE (Centre Co.) Charles Wampler, Jr., board chairman of WLR Foods, Inc. of Harrisonburg, Va. was the featured speaker at the 4th annual Penn State Poultry Science Club Banquet held here last week. Wampler’s father was the first person to raise turkeys in confine ment, which was the start of the modem turkey industry. One of the first county agents in the United States, Charles Wampler, Sr. decided in 1921 to take turkey eggs to a hatdhery rather than allowing hens to run wild and hatch their eggs in nests in wooded areas, which were hard to locate. He also formulated the first turkey feed from onion tops and other ingredients because there were no commercial turkey feeds available at the time. From that beginning with 10 turkey hens and two toms, the Wamplers developed the Wamp ler Feed and Seed Company, which evolved to Wampler Foods (1969-1984), Wampler-Longacre (1984-1988), and the present day WLR Foods in Virginia and Penn sylvania. Its New Oxford, Pa., plant employs 100 turkey produc ers and 1,000 employees. With the aid of favorable nutri tional publicity for being lower in fat than other meats, Wampler said per capita poultry consump tion in the U.S. is now 85 pounds a year, which is higher than pork and almost up to beef. Californian “pacesetters” are eating 24 pounds of turkey a year per person. Wampler cited the biggest chal lenges facing agriculture now and in the future as feeding more peo ple with less land, protecting the Poultry Science Judging Team members, from left: Brian Sensenlch, Troy Eckert, Lydia Kepler, and Eric Smith. P> y piv Charles Wampler In appreciation for his speaking at the banquet. Pictured here are Charles Wampler, Jr. and his wife Dorothy. environment, and most of all, pro tecting the agriculture industry from the environmentalists and animal rightists. Comparing agriculture to Rod ney (“I don’t get no respect”) Dangerfield, Wampler pointed out that agriculturalists need to be “good stewards” of the land and livestock to counteract the effects of consumers taking food supplies for granted and farmers being pushed out by population growth. The future for college graduates in agriculture is bright, Wampler said, even though the types of jobs available are changing. Not as many people are needed for pro duction, but more are needed in technical areas such as computer programming or research, he pointed out Wampler is a strong supporter of his alma mater, James Madison University, where he established two professorships, was rector and Becky Rlegel received the Most Active New Member Award. Th# 1993-94 Penn State Poultry Science Club members, from left, seated In first row: Kristen Hazlett, Brenda Morgan, Mark Skinner, Jodi Marshall, Lydia Kepler, Becky Rlegel, and Eric Smith. Standing In second row; Andy Bradford, Brian Sense nich, Ed Hoffman, Andrew Plummer, Bill Strock, Troy Eckert, Doug Metzler, Henry Zerby, Joe Garber, and club adviser, Dirk Wise. vice rector of the board of visitors, helped set up an arboretum, and has a dorm named after him. He helped establish the Virginia State Fair, for which he was on the board of directors for 25 years. He served on the Virginia Board of Agriculture for eight years and was president and general mana ger of the Rockingham County Fair Association. Club Awards The Penn State Poultry Science Club won the Poultry Club of the Year Award at the International Poultry Exposition in Atlanta for the second year in a row. The club also had the best display at the Penn State Ag Products Spectacu lar at the Nittany Mall in State College last fall and placed Erst at the Ag Hill Olympics. Awards to Poultry Science Club members presented at the banquet were high grade point average to club member Henry Zerby and poultry science major Ed Hoff man; Most Active Club Member - Troy Eckert, 1993-94 club presi dent; and Most Active New Club Member (first year) - Becky Riegel. Club officers for 1994-1995 are Doug Metzler, president; Lydia AJCC Awards Research Grants REYNOLDSBURG, Ohio At their March 1994 meeting, the board of directors of The Ameri can Jersey Cattle Club appropriat ed $39,000 to finance nine Jersey related research projects. Funding was made available from interest income of The AJCC Research Foundation. Qualifying proposals were se lected from a field of 22, based on their relevance to Jersey research priorities that include: • Nutrition of high-producing Jerseys (particularly practical feeding methods to maximize pro duction of valuable milk compon ents); • Factors affecting yield of pro ducts manufactured from Jersey milk; • Factors affecting net income, longevity, and lifetime profit; • Optimal young sire usage; • Biological and economic effi ciencies of Jerseys; and • Factors affecting management of Jersey calves. Researchers and their respec tive institutions will receive the designated funds to conduct the following investigations: Armstrong, Dennis V., Zola AQ * .... dent; Becky Rlegel, secretary-treasurer; and Doug Metzler, president. Kepler, vice president; Becky Riegel, secretary-treasurer; and Brian Sensenich, ag student coun cil representative. Poultry Judging Team mem bers, who competed at the Univer sity of Tennessee, were Troy Eck ert, Lydia Kepler, Eric Smith, and Brian Sensenich. Dirk Wise, club adviser, high- Keister and Roy Ax; University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona. Effects Of A Spray And Fan System On Milk Production And Reproduc tive Efficiency of Jersey Cows In A Hot Arid Climate. $3,500. Bonczek, Richard R., Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, Charles W. Young and Tony Seykora, University of Min nesota, Sl Paul, MN. Inbreeding, Relationship, and Ancestry of Re gistered American Jersey Cows. $2,000. Cowan, C. Michael; Genetic Visions, Inc., Madison. Wiscon sin. Evaluation of the B-lactoglo bulin Gene As A Marker To Re veal Differences In Genetic Value For A Chromosome Pair In An Elite Heterozygote Jersey Sire. $3,500. Goff, Jesse P., Ronald L. Horst and Donald C. Beitz; USDA ARS, National Animal Disease Center and Nutritional Physiology Section, Ames. lowa. Tissue Vita min D. Receptor Concentration in Jersey vs. Holstein Cows; A Pos sible Explanation For Increased Susceptibility Of Jerseys To Milk Fever. $ 5,500. Hemken, R.W. and Z. Du; Uni lighted other club activities including fall and spring turkey sales, a visit to Perdue, Inc., sell ing chicken sandwiches at Ag Progress Days, having a display about the new Penn State poultry farm facilities at the Northeast Poultry Trade Show, and the sum mer internship placement program. versity of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky. Copper Toxicity in Jer sey Cattle. $5,000. Lindberg, Gary L. and Donald C. Seitz; lowa State University, Ames, lowa. Regulation Of Peri parturient Milk Protein Synthesis in Jersey Cattle. $4,000. Me Daniel, Ben T. and John C. Wilk, North Carolina State Uni versity, Raleigh, North Carolina and Can W. Wolfe, The American Jersey Cattle Club, Reynoldsburg, Ohio. Maintaining Genetic Diver sity in the Jersey Breed While Se lecting Intensely for Yield. $6,000. Me Dowell, R.E. and J.C. Wilk: North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina. Stanley Makuza; University of Zimbabwe, Harare. Speaking For Jerseys Around The World. $5,000. Neibergs, Holly and Timothy Reinhardt; National Animal Dis ease Center, Ames, lowa. Asso ciations Between Genetic Markers And The Incidence Of Milk Fever And Associated Disorders In Jer sey Cattle. $4,500.