A3&jLahcaster Farming, Saturday, May 20, 1995 Shellenberger Receives Penn State Alumni Society Award UNIVERSITY PARK (Centre Co.) Dr. Paul R. Shellenberger, professor of dairy science at Penn State, has received the 1995 Col lege of Agricultural Sciences Alumni Society’s Excellence in Academic Advising Award. The award recognizes faculty with outstanding skills in academ ic advising, career planning and personal counseling. Advisers in the college are nominated by alumni, students, faculty and ad ministrators. Shellenberger has been at the forefront of advising in the college since 1967, coordinating advising and teaching in his department and serving on college and univer sity committees devoted to advis ing issues. He currently advises 66 undergraduates in the animal bio sciencb and dairy and animal sci ence majors and advises incoming students during summer counsel ing programs. “Dr. Shellenberger is the most student-oriented professor I have met at Penn State,” said one ad visee. “He took a complete inter est in my goals and ambitions, and has provided nothing but positive advice and direction.” “He has helped guide me in my academic pursuits as well as per sonal goals,” another advisee said. “At a big campus such as Univer sity Park, it is reassuring to know that he will listen and genuinely care if I need someone to talk to.” “Even now, six years after my graduation. Dr. Shellenberger asks about my career goals, and it is not just casual conversation,” stated an alumnus. “I guess he is still my adviser.” “Dr. Shellenberger has worked tirelessly over the years to im- WASHINGTON, D.C.—The Conservation Reserve Program, the USDA program that over the last decade has compensated land owners for idling and preventing erosion on 36.5 million acres of the nation’s most erodible cropland, would benefit from stricter enroll ment criteria, streamlined admini strative procedures and more flexi bility, according to a new report. Issued by American Farmland Trust and the lowa Natural Herit age Foundation, the report indi cates only the most environmental ly sensitive lands should be enrolled in CRP and removed from production. It suggests the prog ram should be simplified to allow producers to enroll at any time, not prove student academic advising,” said Dr. Gabriella Varga, associ ate professor of animal science. “He truly cares about students and does everything he can to help them have a highly productive and rewarding undergraduate career at Penn State.” Shellenberger has received many university, local and nation al awards for excellence in advis Report Assesses CRP just during specified sign-up per iods. It says the CRP should offer a variety of flexible enrollment options, including multi-year leases and permanent and term easements. In addition, it states that some limited, economic use should be allowed on enrolled land, provided such uses remain compatible with the program’s conservation objectives. ‘This report shows that there is strong, grass-roots support for the, continuation of the CRP into the 21st century,” said Bryan Petrucci, director of Resource Conservation Programs for American Farmland Trust “It’s one of the best exam ples we haye of a voluntary, incentive-based program working to protect the resource base, and with a few minor changes, it can be . _ , trough and not on the floor or In tha pH. [Ufipthoactl Northeast Agri Systems, Inc. (HI Flyway Business Park s,oreh °urs Mon-Fri 730t0430 mm wu^Enary’AVE.' 139 A West Airport Road ~ -,® 0 ' 800,oNoon (Formtriy Long Lumber) Lititz. PA 17543 24 Hr 7 Day Repair Service 023 I mSS*isouSh l Ph (717)569-2702 fS| 7,m a,m.-4;m F.i*. KaHii 1-800-673-2580 19 ISSS&I ing and teaching. In 1991, he received the Excel lence in Advising Award from Penn State's Undergraduate Stu dent Government Academic As sembly. In 1985, he received the AMOCO Foundation Award for Excellence in teaching Perfor mance. In 1975, he received the Christian R. and Mary F. Lind back Award for Distinguished even better." The report, ‘The Conservation Reserve Program; An Assessment Based on State Leadership Work shops,” summarizes discussions of seven state workshops held throughout the Midwest and Great Plains in late 1994. AFT, a national farmland conservation group ba sed in Washington, D.C., and the lowa Natural Heritage Founda tion, sponsored by workshops in cooperation with local agriculture and conservation groups in Illi nois, lowa, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Nebraska, South Dakota and North Dakota. Farmers and landowners, representatives from key state and federal agencies, as well as conser vation, agriculture and wildlife groups all participated in the workshops. Discussions focused on key areas of the CRP, including con servation targeting, needed admi- OtMiil UtfIUFLO Tt»u#i »ts&4 CTIil master distributor siijce# Teaching from Penn State. Shellenberger joined Penn State as an assistant professor in 1967 and became a full professor in 1977. Before joining Penn State, he was an associate professor of agriculture at Tarleton State Col lege in Texas and a dairy specialist for the Texas Agricultural Exten sion Service of Texas A&M Uni versity. nistrative changes, costs, benefits, federal budget concerns and poten tial new enrollment incentives. The report reflects workshop dis cussions on these issues, high lights areas of agreement and con cern and identifies matters needing further review. 1 Other report highlights include: • Desire for more local input on identifying resource concerns and targeting land for enrollment. • Allowing states with qualify ing land retirement programs to assume CRP oversight and admi nistrative functions. • Using CRP as a tool for eco nomic development and a way to help beginning farmers acquire land. The report was funded, in part, by The Joyce Foundation. Limited quantities are available. Contact American Farmland Trust at (202)659-5170 for further information. The Right Choice in broiler feeders Feed broilers and pullets your way! As the world leader in poultry feeding systems, Chore-Time offers you the best choices In feeders. You will love what our newest feeders —die Model C 2™ and Model H2™—do for you. 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