82-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 19, 2000 Progress Makers LOU ANN GOOD Lancaster Farming Staff ROCKSPRING (Centre Co.) Seeking information, enter tainment, fun and food, thou sands swarmed the grounds at Penn State’s Russell E. Larson Agricultural Research Center during Ag Progress Days. They were not disappointed. “I’m thoroughly enjoying this,” said Nancy Witmer of Manheim. She was one of the visitors who wanted to know more about the West Nile disease spread by mosquitoes. She found a work shop on insect borne diseases in triguing. Some farmers attend to see and hear about the latest ma chinery and crop advances. Children climb over the tractors, collect stickers, balloons, and other freebies, admire the ani mals in the petting zoo and wild life workshops, and participant in many of the games and activi ties held in the Family Room. For many families, Ag Prog ress Days is an annual trek. Stanley and Julie King, Belle ville dairy farmers, said they come every year. So do Michael and Melody Fogal. Aaron and Virginia Zimmer man said that it was the first time they attended the event since they were married. Aaron wanted to talk with all the seed people, but they found so many other events interesting to them selves and their children, Heather, S, Monica, 3, and Conrad, 2. Of course with so many activi ties and exhibits, it takes hun dreds of people to work at the booths and workshops. But the exhibitors seem to enjoy it as much as the visitors. While Dale Schnupp, Leba non, stayed with the booth, his Below, extended family members such as these hold a mini-family reunion at Ag Progress. From left are Bradford Countians Dalton and Lisa Weber with children, Christ!, 10, and Travis, 6; Grandma Velma Schnupp, whose husband Dale is a standholder from Lebanon, and grandchil dren Kyle Burkholder, Rome, and Kelvin Diffen bach. Wolmesdorf. wife Velma accompanied her grandchildren and daughter Lisa and husband Dalton Weber around the grounds. The three-day event, which ran Tuesday through Thursday, offered workshops on health, food, gardening, landscaping, inventions, and innovations show people how to integrate new findings into their everyday lifestyles. Informational tours on woodlot management, nu trient management, and stream bank conservation gave visitors a chance to view the research being carried out throughout the year. The family center is packed with fun activities for children and adults to learn how to eat for better health. Not all classes were taught by adults. Second-grader Tara Fisher helped her mom Susan teach a Kids in the Kitchen workshop. The audience could participate in “shaking them selves silly” to make ice cream in the bag and yogurt pudding. “Children can learn early in life that cooking is fun. It teaches them lifeskills and helps them with math and science,” Susan said. Numerous games and activi ties provided educational knowledge with lots of laughs. Prizes were given to those who found the right answers by Above, milk promoters for Pennsylvania Dairy Princess Program Services, from left, include Pennsylvania Alter nate Amanda Giikinson; Junia Isiminger, PDPPS coordina tor; Pennsylvania Dairy Princess Lori Connelly; Roberta McConnell, western coordinator; and State Alternate Re becca Kilgore. After “shaking herself silly” Tara Fisher slurps some of the ice cream she made in a bag. At left, Samantha, 5, and Nicholas, 3, find their own entertainment. They are the children of Michael and Melody Fogal, Mt. Union. Above, ready to play ball are Eric, 7, Kendric, 5, and Corey, 2, children of Mike and Janie Musser, Denver hog and chicken farmers, with a cousin, Randall. searching for clues in a treasure hunt held in the Family Room. Farm safety is always a con cern for farm families. Many ac cidents can be avoided by taking the proper precautions. The Women’s Auxiliary of the Penn sylvania Farm Bureau set up a miniature farm display. Those who found the 17 hazards re ceived a prize depending on their ages. Some of the prizes were sunglasses, earplugs, and coloring books. Their names were also entered in a drawing for a smoke detector. Connie Teel, safety chairman, said that 40 percent of reported farm injuries happen to women. Women, she said, do a lot of the barn work, making them (Turn to Pago B 3)