Long-time NAFB broadcaster Ed Slusarczyk passed away on Friday December 29 at approximately 6:00 a.m. eastern time.
You may read the article on Ed's passing in the Utica Observer Dispatch here.
Ed had been struggling with recovery after
surgery for a recently discovered brain tumor.
The website for the funeral home obituary is here. You may also post a
comment for the family at this link. Flowers and sympathy cards are welcome. Friends are also encouraged to send
contributions to the Ed Slusarczyk Scholarship Fund that has been established in
his memory. Checks should be made out to the NAFB Foundation and sent to: Condolences to the family may be sent to: Ed Slusarczyk
When World War II started Ed built machine guns
until enlisting in the Army in 1942. He survived the Normandy invasion in 1944,
but was severely wounded in the battle of St. Lo. Recovery from a shattered left
leg and ribs took nearly two years at the army hospital in Martinsburg, WV. A
doctor suggested broadcasting as therapy. So, even while bedridden, he did a
daily 30-minute program of farm news and sports on Armed Forces station WNDB.
85% disabled, Ed enrolled at Cornell University,
traveling with the teams and reporting sports on WHCU, Ithaca, NY. He worked
summers as 4-H extension agent in Oneida County and before earning his degree in
Ag Economics he managed the student radio station. Bunny Broadman and Ed married in 1947. She was
his partner and mother of their four children. Ed began his commercial farm
radio career on WIBX, Utica, NY in 1949. He left in 1956 to build and manage
WREM, Remsen, NY. Ten years later Ed and Bunny sold the station and he returned
to WIBX. The Slusarczyk family formed Ag Radio Network in
1976, starting with 11 stations. Ed reached his goal of “providing a voice for
farmers in the Northeast” in 2002 when 144 stations were affiliated with Ag
Radio Network, covering the Northeast from Maryland to Maine. Concern for his ancestral homeland led Ed to
make more than 26 trips to Poland. He spearheaded relief efforts, collecting
thousands of dollars to help farmers move from collective farms to free markets.
He became president of an investment company in Eastern Europe, Polonian
Development, Ltd. and chairman of Ed Lech Universal Import/Export Co., Inc.
A world traveler, Ed promoted farm broadcasting
in East Africa, contributed equipment, and helped establish a network in Uganda.
Ed Slusarczyk was NAFB regional vice president
four times and chaired many committees. His awards and recognitions cover walls
in more than one room. They include 1985 Farm Broadcaster of the Year, “Champion
of Democracy” awarded by the Polish Government in 1990, and NAFB Hall of Fame,
2002.
National Association of Farm Broadcasting
Attn: NAFB Foundation/Ed Slusarczyk Scholarship
P.O. Box 500
Platte City, MO 64079
Ag Radio Network, Inc.
PO Box 437
Utica, NY 13503
Ed Slusarczyk, founder of Ag Radio Network, was
a commercial farm broadcaster more than 68 years. He grew up on a dairy farm
near Prospect, NY loving radio, pretending he was a radio announcer when he was
only four. In 1938 Ed began reporting news of the Oneida and Lewis County FFA
chapters on WIBX, Utica, NY.