A2B-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 18, 2003 Agro 2003, Opening Ceremonies Highlight New, Improved Farm Show ANDY ANDREWS Editor HARRISBURG (Dauphin Co.) “Wait until you see it,” Gov. Mark Schweiker told more than 1,200 gathered in the large banquet room late last week at the Harrisburg Hilton and Tow ers. “We’re going to show you a building that will give you the same feelings you had in your belly when you were a little boy.” Late last week, Schweiker re ferred to the more than $B6 mil lion spent on the major new Farm Show Complex additions and renovations during the Penn sylvania Farm Show Agro 2003 International Celebration. This was a day before the Grand Opening of the 2003 Pennsylva nia Farm Show. Schweiker also reminded more than 200 international agri-in dustry guests from 76 countries that the Farm Show provides a real showcase of the “might of Pennsylvania farming, agribusi ness, and farm families.” Agro 2003 is the annual kick off event for the eight-day long new and expanded Farm Show. The Farm Show is not only about the business of farming, Schweik er noted, but shows the “grit and determination to till the soil and grow the enterprise,” he said. The farm life “is more than a paycheck and a means to a living it is an honorable way of life.” First Union Bank was honored during Agro 2003. From left, Sam Hayes, state secretary of agriculture; Darvin Boyd, senior vice president, director of Agri-Finance, First Union Bank; and Roger Rohrer, vice president, business banking senior relationship manager, First Union Bank. Schweiker capped the two-da> event with an introduction to Farm Show visitors in the Large Arena on opening day last Satur day. But the evening before the Farm Show official!) opened. Agro 2003 honored businesses and related agri-industr> throughout the state, in addition to international agribusiness. Schweiker recounted his expe riences in dealing with rural Pennsylvania during the Que creek Mine Disaster last August, when “nine for nine” miners were rescued after a cave-in, and what that taught him. The advantage, he told those at Agro 2003, was the “built-in value system” of rural Pennsylva nia. Schweiker said, “Some coun tries don’t know that value sys tem. ... but they know it’s fruitful, they know it pays off. It’s part of our collective energy, part of our collective psyche.” No country can outdo that de termination and personal spirit, no one can “outdo the Pennsylva nia farmer,” he told the visitors. With eyes brimming with tears, Schweiker recounted eight years with the current administration (assuming the leadership role as former Gov. Tom Ridge was an nounced as President George Bush’s appointment to head the (Turn to Page A3O) s . . . I I s . 111. . Turner Dairy was honored at Agro 2003 last week. From left, Sam Hayes, state secre tary of agriculture; Chuck Turner Sr.; and Chuck Turner Jr. Agriculture commodity representatives gather for the reception at the start of Agro 2003 late last week. . The state P° lice .^9 l^,*^,:^.a>WH # ,V®a/;* aJ Fanji Show.