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Southern Plains Beef Symposium 2001 - Press Release
News release
issued August 2, 2001, effective immediately. For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580)
224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org
Note:
This event occurred in 2001. Please see our news releases
section for upcoming events.
Timely Tips, Trade
Show, Baxter Black Beef Up Ardmore Cattle Symposium ARDMORE,
Okla. Producing and marketing beef are becoming more difficult, not easier,
as fickle consumerism, unforgiving weather conditions and increased production
costs transpire to make life one long headache for area ranchers. But
cattle producers have found they can catch up on the latest in beef production
technology, and this year even have it topped off with a heaping dose of cowboy
humor, at the Southern Plains Beef Symposium in Ardmore on Aug. 11. The popular
cattle-info program is co-hosted by the Noble Foundation and the Oklahoma State
University Cooperative Extension. Organizers
think this years program will be the best ever. Not only are presenters
some of the most knowledgeable beef professionals and specialists from the a six-state
area, but the program also includes a trade show and closing remarks from nationally
known cowboy poet and comic Baxter Black, who calls himself "head cowboy" of the
Coyote Cowboy Company in Benson, Ariz. Twenty
trade show participants have signed up for the program, according to Fred Schmedt,
agricultural economist, and Shan Ingram, Education and Special Projects manager,
both with the Noble Foundation. The
$25 early registration fee (due by Aug. 6; $30 at the door) includes a steak lunch.
The closing comments by Black can be heard by the general public for $30 at the
door. A former large animal veterinarian, Black frequently provides syndicated
humorous comment and cowboy poems on National Public Radio Registration
and fee should be mailed to Southern Plains Beef Symposium, c/o The Noble Foundation,
P.O. Box 2180, Ardmore, OK 73402-2180. Checks should be made to Southern Plains
Beef Symposium. Registration for the symposium at Heritage Hall, 220 W. Broadway
in downtown Ardmore, begins at 8:30 a.m., with programs starting at 9. For additional
information, contact the Carter County OSU Extension office in Ardmore or the
Noble Foundation at (580) 223-5810. Speakers
and their topics for the symposium include Eddie Funderburg, Noble Foundation
soil and crops specialist, Forage Fertilization Factors to Consider;
Jim Mintert, Kansas State University/Manhattan, Cattle Supply and Demand
Market Outlook Update; Stacy Gunter, University of Arkansas, Stockers vs.
Cow-Calf; Bob Long, retired from Texas Tech University, Selection Criteria:
Muscle, Fat and Bone How to Identify Them; and Steve Armbruster, Stillwater,
Okla., The Beef Industry A Glimpse of the Future? A
panel discussion on How to Merchandise Your Product is the final afternoon program.
Speakers and their topic specialties include Don Schiefelbein, Westminister, Colo.,
genetics; Sally Dolezal, Derby, Kan., animal identification and data
management; Ken Jordan, San Saba, Texas, marketing; and Gary Johnson,
Dwight, Kansas, production management. Blacks
closing comments begin at 6 p.m. ### Symposium
Schedule Baxter Black Photos: Color Tiff
(2 MB) | B/W Tiff (736 k) The
Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, headquartered in Ardmore, Okla., is a non-profit
organization conducting agricultural, forage biotechnological, and plant biology
research; providing grants to numerous non-profit charitable, educational and
health organizations; and assisting farmers and ranchers through educational and
consultative agricultural programs. To
learn more, check out the Noble Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org.
More news releases available
at www.noble.org/Press_Release
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