Aao-lanctttor Fanning, Saturday, May 20, 2000 Maryland To Host National 4-H Youth Tech Conference COLLEGE PARK, Md. Maryland’s reputation in com puter technology has resulted in the first-ever National 4-H Tech Conference scheduled July 8-12 on the University of Maryland campus at College Park. Teams of three to five youth with their adult leaders from all 50 states are expected to attend the July event. Computer labo ratories in the university’s na Northeast Order Uniform Price For April 2000 BOSTON, MA Erik F. Rasmussen, Market Adminis trator for the Northeast Market ing Area, has announced that the statistical uniform price for April 2000 is $12.46 per hun dredweight or $1.07 per gallon for milk delivered to plants lo cated in Suffolk County, MA (Boston). The statistical uniform price is the benchmark minimum pro ducer blend price paid to dairy farmers, prior to allowable de ductions, for milk containing 3.5 percent butterfat, 2.99 percent protein, and 5.69 percent other solids. The price received by an individual dairy farmer will vary as the component composi tion of a farm’s milk differs from the established benchmarks. Rasmussen also stated that the pro ducer price differen tial (PPD) for April is $3.05 per hun dredweight for milk delivered to plants lo cated in Suffolk County, MA. The PPD represents each pro ducer’s share of the value generated by the marketwide pool on a hundredweight basis. The PPD, which is added to the payment producers receive for their milk’s compo nents, is adjusted for the location of the re ceiving plant. The sta tistical uniform price and PPD decrease by scheduled amounts the more distant the plant is from Suffolk County, MA. The April PPD is $2.95 in New York NY, and $2.85 in Philadelphia, PA. The Class prices for milk pooled in April are as follows: Class I, $14.18 (Suffolk County, MA); Class 11, $12.10; Class 111, $9.41; and Class IV, $11.38. Had the Northeast Order been in effect in 1999, com parable class prices for April 1999 would have been: Class I $16.00, Class II $12.05, Class 111 $11.64, and Class IV price $11.26. The component values for April are protein, $1.7399 per pound; butterfat, $1.1352 per pound; other solids, $0.0408 per pound; and nonfat solids, $0.8537 per pound. tionally’ known AT & T Teach ing Theatre, several campus lec ture halls, and the Animal Sciences-Agricultural Engineer ing complex will be utilized for hands-on advanced training. Participants will be housed in a campus dormitory. A 12-member planning com mittee/design team-half of whom are older teen-age mem bers of state 4-H youth technol- Milk receipts from producers totaled 2.091 billion pounds. Class I utilization, milk pro cessed as beverage milk, was 39.0 percent of producer milk receipts. The average Class I utilization, for the three prede cessor orders that were com bined to form the Northeast Order, was 40.2 percent in April 1999. The manufacture of Class II products such as cream, ice cream, yogurt, and cottage cheese utilized 17.4 percent of producer milk. Milk used to manufacture Class 111 products such as cheese (American and Italian) and evaporated con densed products utilized 30.2 percent of total milk receipts. Class IV usage (butter, nonfat and whole milk powder) equaled 13.4 percent of the total. INCREDIBLE LOW PRICES!! SUPER TOUGH STEEL BUILDINGS Factory Direct 800/825-5059 ogy leadership teams-met recently at the Maryland 4-H Center in College Park to iron out final arrangements. Participating youth team members from Maryland are Alicia Rausch of Laurel, Kristen Fitzpatrick of LaPiata, and Shelley M. Armour of Joppa towne, Armour is a general agri culture sophomore at the University of Maryland. Other youth planning team members hail from Kansas, Vir ginia, and California. That list includes Andrew Bell of Lincoln, Kan.; Beverly Beasley of Stuart, Va.; Anna Calasanti-Laws of Blacksburg, Va.; and Steven Worker of Santa Maria, Calif. They will be assisted by sev eral adult 4-H professional workers and volunteers, includ ing Richard A. Byrne, Marie Fredette, and Kendra B. Wells of the Maryland Cooperative Extension 4-H youth develop ment state office in College Park. Other adult advisers are Kevin Wentzel of San Jose, Calif.; Peter Laws of Blacksburg, Va.; and Trudy Dunham of St. Paul, Minn. Wentzel is a volunteer leader with the California 4-H Tech nology Corps.; Laws is a state extension 4-H youth specialist at Virginia Tech,; and Dunham is the University of Minnesota coordinator for CYFERNet, a national web-based computer network for land-grant universi ties, extension educators, and the USDA’s Cooperative State Research, Education and Exten sion Service (CSREES). Also serving as consultants are Virginia Gobeli, national 4- H program leader, and Thomas G. Tate, a national progi Available mocli'K 25 x 32 (2 left) 45 x9O (1 left! 30x41(3 left) 50 x 100 12 left) 40 x62(4 left) 55 xISO (2 left) t all tor other si/f-, Top Dairy Herds By Breed The following are the top pro ducing dairy herds in Maryland for April 2000. The herds are or ganized by breed, and the pro duction is based on energy corrected milk. County Ass’n; Herd Name; # Cows In Herd; and ECM for top producing Ayrshire herds. Howard: David & James Pa trick, 55 cows, 69.4 pounds; Frederick: Homestead Farm, 21 cows, 68.9 pounds; Frederick: Vales-Pride Farm, 38 cows, 66.4 pounds; Carroll: R-Lynn Farm, 14 cows, 65.7 pounds; Balti more: William Warns Farm, 11 cows, 62.1 pounds; Carroll: Whispering Ayr, 46 cows, 41.7 pounds. In the Brown Swiss division, top herds are: Harford: Green- Castle Swiss, 15 cows, 77.4 pounds; Frederick: K. Scott & leader in information technol ogy. Both work for the USDA CSREES headquarters office in Washington, D.C. The Federal Health Care Finance Administration, based in Baltimore, is a cooperating agency. It is interested in the concept of computer-literate youth helping senior citizens and disabled persons get “online.” Organizers hope that the Na tional 4-H Technology Confer ence will be a catalyst enabling states to share, obtain and create information while building net works for sharing of new ideas. Registration information for the conference is available online at http://ca4h.org/4hntc. The e-mail address is 4hntc@4- h.org. Feed Mill • Transport Augers TREMENDOUS Early Order Savings on Grain Dryers ★Full Line Parte Dept.* ★Sell, Service & Install* • • ■ k Judy Hood, 32 cows, 72.4 pounds; Frederick: Vales-Pride Farm, 11 cows, 72.1 pounds; Frederick: Fir-Thome-B, 53 cows, 71.5 pounds; Garrett: Jason Brenneman, 17 cows, 66.4 pounds; Carroll: Ryan Bell, 13 cows, 64.1 pounds; Frederick: Shafdon Swiss, 13 cows; 62.7 pounds; Frederick: Harold Long Brown Swiss, 17 cows, 60.3 pounds; Frederick: Dwayne & Miriam Bell, 62 cows, 54.3 pounds. For Guernsey, top herds in cluded: Frederick: Walnut Ridge Farm, If cows, 73.4 pounds; Kent: Keith Dixon, 27 cows, 68.5 pounds; Queen’ Anne’s: William B. Messix 111, 18 cows, 63.4 pounds; Frederick; Anovadale Guernseys, 38 cows, 56.3 pounds; Kent: Dogwood Lane Farm, 78 cows, 52.9 pounds; Frederick: Three Brooks Farm, 76 cows, 44.3 pounds. High producing herds in the Jersey breed are: Frederick: Glenn Beard, 13 cows, 80.0 pounds; Garrett: Paul & Naomi Petersheim, 29 cows, 65.3 pounds; Carroll: Mayer’s Stoney Point, 18 cows, 57.7 pounds; Carroll: Tomorrow’s Promise Inc., 58 cows, 57.3 pounds; Washington: Willow Spring Farm, 58 cows, 56.4 pounds; Kent: P. Thomas Mason, 45 cows, 55.8 pounds; Garrett: Karen & Carlton Orendorf, 45 cows, 54.2 pounds; Frederick; Jersey Spring Farm, 112 cows, 54.0 pounds; Carroll: Charles De Groft, 51 cows, 51.9 pounds; Howard: Richard A: -Pue, 20 cows, 51.5 pounds. ' • Wet Tanks • Gram Bins • Stirring Systems • Utility Augers (gg) AUTOMATIC BATCH OR CONTINUOUS FLOW GRAIN DRYERS tel Westfield Grain Augers 8” & 10” Transport Augers (In Stock) 6 MONTHS • NO INTEREST OFFER EXPIRES MAY 31, 2000 Approx. 5 mi. South of Lancaster on Rt. 272 14 Harrvllla Road Willow Street, PA 17584 Ph. 717-464-3321 or Toll Free 800-732-0053 Mon.-Frl. 6:30 am to 8 pm Sat. 7:30 am to 6 pm Sun. 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