Sire Alliance May Allow Beef Producers To Increase Beef Quality SUNRISE BEACH, Mo. - Increasing the quality of cattle through the use of profitable genetics is one of the main objec tives of many cattle producers. Some progressive Angus raisers have realized the potential of identifying these superior genes and have joined together to form the Angus Sire Alliance. In its second yeatf the Angus Sire Alliance is the largest prog eny test of its kind in the United States. The alliance boasts 35 members, reaching from New York to California, Georgia to Texas. However, only 25 mem bers actually participate in the alliance, with the other ten members serving as alternates. Ranches and individuals par ticipating in the alliance are as Pennsylvania Farm Bureau Day Designated HARRISBURG (Dauphin Co.) Mon day. March 30, was designated as “Pennsyl vania Farm Bureau Day” in separate resolu tions passed unanimously by the stale House md Senate. The passage was witnessed by members of the statewide farm organization who were in the state Capitol that day as part of Pennsylvania Farm Bureau’s annual Har risburg Legislative Tour. “We came of age today,” remarked PFB President Guy Donaldson at a banquet later that evening during which copies of the re solutions were formally {Resented. About 300 farmers from throughout the stale had visited with their lawmakers earlier to discuss PFB’s priority state legislative issues. PFB has been conducting Harrisburg Legislative Tours for decades. It was the first time their efforts had been honored by the General Assembly. Recognizing Pennsylvania Farm Bureau as a strong voice for agriculture at the local, state and federal level, the resolutions congratu lated PFB for its contributions to the Com monwealth and the economic welfare of the agricultural industry in Pennsylvania. The Senate resolution was introduced by Sen. Noah Wenger (R-36th DisL), acting chairman of the Senate Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee. In the House, Rep. Ray Bunt (R-147th Dist), chairman of the House Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee sponsored the re solution honoring Farm Bureau. Donaldson, PFB Vice President Carl Shaf fer and administrative secretary Lou Sallie at tended the introduction of the resolutions as special gueSts and were introduced during the proceedings in both chambers. Noting that the introduction of die resolu tion coincided with PFB's annual Harrisburg Tour, Sen. Wenger said legislators have come to look forward to the “free interchange of communications’’ that lakes place every year with Farm Bureau members. Sen. Patrick Stapleton (D-41st Dist), minority chairman o ( the Senate Agriculture Committee, ex pressed his support for the resolution and told his colleagues that a delegation of Farm Bur eau members who had visited his office that day informed him that local tax reform is their number one priority. He urged legislators to heed their message. In die House, Rep. Art Henhey (R-13th Dist), a farmer-turned-legislator and former leader in the form organization, expressed his ipprcciation of PFB. Ifc remembered how, 25 yean earlier, he had participated as a young dairyman in the Harrisburg Legislative Tour and how exciting it had been to see Farm Bur eau policies, developed from the grass-roots level, being enacted into law. Other law makers also voiced their appreciation of PFB’s efforts over the years. Pennsylvania Farm Bureau was established byagroupof farmers as the Pennsylvania Far mers’ Association in November 1950. PFB is a voluntary, non-government organization which represents 25,247 member families in 54 county units. follows: Generation Angus, Lexington, Ala.; Sauk Valley Angus, Rockfalls, 111.; International Breeding Center, Spencer, Ind.; Eaglestone Farms, Carlisle, Ky; Waldeck Farms, Crestwood, Ky.; Whitestone Farm, Aldie, Va.; Champion Hill, Bidwell, Ohio; Shady Brook Farms, Leoma, Tenn.; Aristocrat Angus, Platteville, Colo.; Koch Beef, Wichita, Kan.; A & M Circle T Ranch, Salem, Mo.; High Field Angus, Clinton Comers, N.Y.; Vintage Angus, Modesto, Calif.; McCurry Bros., Sedgewick, Kan.; Brest Angus Farm, Oxford, Ind.; Circle B Angus, Vienna, Mo.; Broken Lance Ranch, Bucyrus, Kan.; Weiker Angus Ranch, Fayette, Mo.; Twin Valley, Pratteville, Ala.; Davis on the Highlands, Springfield, Ky; "Doc" Hinds, St. Charles, Mo. and Norb Siegfried, St. Louis, Mo.; Three Trees Ranch, Sharpsburg, Ga.; Springfield Angus, Louisburg, N.C.; Twin Oak Farms, Quarryville, Pa.; Toebbin Triple T Ranch, Union, Ky; Southern Angus, Dothan, Ala.; Diamond W Ranch, Burton, Texas; Leachman Angus, Bozeman, Mont.; Bear Creek Angus, Cameron, Mont.; Circle A Ranch, Iberia, Mo. Members should submit one purebred, registered Angus bull to the Angus Sire Alliance head quarters, located in Iberia, Mo. Each bull is then turned out with 50 commercial Angus cows. Semen from that same sire is used to artificially inseminate 50 more commercial Angus cows. "The main objective of the Angus Sire Alliance is to identi fy the most profitable and pre dictable Angus genetics in the United States," said Fred Frey of Twin Oak Farms, one of the UncwHf farming, Siturtoy, April It, 19M-A3O alliance's members. "This pro gram will eventually spread throughout the country, making it profitable to all cattle produc ers by improving the quality of beef and making the animal Phosphorus Provides Forum (Continued from Pago ASS) The phosphorus containing grain and feed crops are then shipped to areas specializing in concentrated livestock production (crop growing for feed is economi cally and quality wise too much trouble to oo locally). The manures containing the nutrients, especially phosphorus (which doesn’t move quickly unless excessive, in poor soils, or on the surface of the soil), are then spread on limited soils. more efficient." In the progeny test, the steer calves are the only ones that will be slaughtered. The heifer calves will be retained for breed ing purposes, Frey said. Conference Thus, the phosphorus that doesn’t get shipped away from the farm via the meat animals, gets put on the soils. Many of the farms are small and excessive phosphorus levels can be achieved quickly, even with balancing for nitrogen,' all manure and especially some poultry manures contains more phosphorus than needed. The issue then, according to Lanyon, is to discover a feasible means of completing a cycle of phosphorus flow, and distribution. (Continued next week).