4—Lancaster Farming. Saturday, January 21, 1967 From Where We Stand... Warwick Vo-Ag Program In Jeopardy If the Warwick school board has its way. the number of county schools offering vocational agriculture courses will drop to eight by the end of this school year. The beard icached its decision in the face of what it described as “a de creasing number of farms in the area which has resulted in a steadily declin ing vocational agriculture enrollment”. This sort of cause-effect reasoning is not unusual among administrators. Nor is the problem itself unusual; many schools and colleges, particularly here in the East, are facing a decreasing agriculture enrollment. However, its solution requires more than a simple bookkeeping approach which says “we can’t economically justi fy this program because of the apparent ly small student interest.” So, applying the latest Pentagon-slang, the program is “phased-out” Well, that’s certainly one solution, and it does solve the school administra tors’ immediate problem But does it best serve the community, which is the administrators' long-range concern? In the case of Waiwick, we feel certain that it dees not And taking the farm community oi Lancaster County as a whole, it doss not' Like so many administrators before them, the Warwick officials seem to feel the words “tarming" and “agricul ture” are one and the same Perhaps they once were, but today nothing could be fui ther from the fact Farm ing is Ccitamly the bedrock of agricul ture, but for every farmer producing a food product, there are five, six, or probably more persons doing something to the product as it travels to the con sumer There are only about two million commercial farmers m this country, and yet, approximately 40 percent of our total national working population is key ed to agriculture in one way or another and we don’t mean eating' As fewer farmers produce more food for an ever-increasing population at home and abroad, even more people will be required to “service” Two-Year Agribusiness Program at Penn State Expands To Meet Need The teims giowth and “success” descnbs the new two veai agncultuial business pio giam at Penn State Univeisity says Di Clarence E Tiottei piofessoi ot maiketmg in the College of -\g!iailtuie Tiottei indicates the pic giam has mown by populai le quest tiom one to thiee Com monwealth campuses The Altoona Campus the BeirS Campus at Reading and the Payette Campus at Uniontown Eniollment has mcieased 40 peicent since the Inst began in 1064 Gi actuates have all staitecl at salaues langing ~mwm / ( n - Temperatures through Wed nesday are expected to aver age within the normal range of 39 to 23 degrees. It will be seasonably cold through out the five day period with little day-to-day change. It looks like dry skies for our area until about Tues day or Wednesday. The weather bureau sees precipi tation at that time amount ing to inch, melted. Rain or snow? The only an swer the weatherman gave to that question was, “Yes”. Take your choice. It may be a little harder to see this in Lancaster County because here folks have been farm-oriented for so long that they are inclined to think only of the production aspects of agriculture. But if these same people will open their eyes they will see whole industries right in our county whose total activi ties are geared to agriculture. They are too numerous to mention, but anyone scanning the advertisements in this farm paper will get an idea of their quantity and diversity. Helping to educate school officials in your community on these opportuni ties is worthy of the best efforts of each of us Allied industry has a real stake in this problem too, and will undoubtedly help by furnishing facts, figures, and probably some time. Your various farm associations could adopt this program to educate the educators in each school district, and in the whole county. If such a program is undertaken now, it will avoid the need for a crash effort later as individual vocational agriculture courses are jeopardized due to school administration ignor ance, and it will enable well-trained Lancaster County boys to fill jobs right here in Lancaster County .where they are so urgently needed. It’s part of doing the whole agricultural job right here where the product is pro duced. And as a side-benefit, new agricultural industry may be encour aged to come here, and present in dustry to expand, if they can be assured of a good supply of agricul turally-trained personnel. £1 om S 5 000 to $6 100 and pi os pective employeis alieady aie inqumng about June ’67 giadu ates Seveial giaduates weie em ployed as management tiainees by a laige agncultuial co opeiative These peisons seive as assistant manageis in teed, teitihzei, oi seed depauments oi assist in opeiating a re tail =toie Anothei giaduate opeiates a feitihzer blending and mixing station A vege table piocessing plant huea one giaduate to supervise all phases ot conti acting, pioduc ing, and haivesting ot ciops Inspecting li mis and vege tables toi a maim lailioad oc cupies anothei giaduate Coiuses in business mathe matics, accounting, and busi ness law aie the coie oi the pi ogi am, Ti ottei explains Coiuses in agncultuial econo mics analyze efficient pi educ tion and maiketmg of agucul tuial pioducts Basic studies in science and technical agn cultuie aie included Giaduates teceive an associate degiee To entei the two-yeai agu cultuial business piogiam, a student must be a high school giaduate with a background of 3 units of English, 2 units of mathematics, and 10 additional units Scores on the Scholas tic Aptitude Test of the Col lege Enti ance Examination the product somewhere along its route. It is just as great a service to any community if its schools prepare a student for a responsible job in local agricultural industry, as if they train him to go back on the farm. As Warwick High School voca tional agriculture instructor Clair Zerby observed this week, “until school administrators and guidance people are educated to the countless job opportunities in agriculturally related industries, the vocational ag riculture student enrollment problem will continue.” Boaid must be submitted Winter is a good time for mteiested high school seniois to apply foi admission, Trottei points out Intelested peisons y* H should write to the Dean of H H 1111 Admissions, 109 Willaid Build- * * *■*** mg, Univeisity Paik, Pa, 16802 Couises stait in the Fall Teim © Farm Calendar (Continued fiom Page 1) at Kauffman’s Faim Equip ment Co, Mountville —8 pm, Cattle Feedeis Meeting at Milton Brecht School, Lititz Pike, Lane —8 p m Penn Manoi Adult Fanner Class, Past I “Be coming Acquainted With Soils’ cpcakei, Oival Bass, U S Soil Conseivation Seiv ice, at Penn Manoi H S Januaiy 27 8 pm, Hoise men’s inloimational meeting at Landisville, sponsoied by county extension seivice —8 pm, ASCS Wheat & Feed Giam meeting at Lan castei Faim Credit Bldg liANCAsma farming cow within 2 to 4 houis of The repeat suggestion of Lancaster Own Farm mi i kmg may cause tioutole, Pacing the order foi spung po Box 2GG - Lintz, Pa i754i also, the silage odoi in a bam f ei 'tolizer needs is timely Many off.cl 22 i. jMmst, wheie the cows are milked §roweis have alread y deter ' Bit.w, pa it-.in wneie tne cows aie mincea mined theit . neec i s and are ex- Phone i£"u S b2«-s 3 m J 047 ° r Wlth the normal m,!kin S m a- pectmg the quality and quan- Don Timmons, itduor chines may cause undesirable tity needed Due to the heavier R i)Trcctor Cdmpbel1 ’ Adve, ' tisinff odois in the milk The feed- use of chemical feihhzers in ?übs(iipnon puce $2 per vear m ino - 0 f these ma.teiials should S eneia l, some sources may not County $3 elsewhere 01 t “ toe m f teila “ Shoum meet the demand A complete Established iso\ember 4, 1955 follow the milking time or +v ,. rno , tVl „a of Published eveiy Saturday by SOll tGS't IS tilG DGSt lUG'tuOCl Ot Lancaster Fannins, Lititz, Pa precede milking by at least determining what is needed for Second Class Postage paid at r _ Lititz. Pa 17543 four hours. any given crop. Beyond Words Lesson For January 22, 1967 lackgreund Scripture Lute 7 and 8 Oevehonel Reading Miah6) 8 A gieat violinist begins to play a concerto by Brahms. Two men sit side by side in an automobile and hear the music as it swells trom their car radio. To one man the sounds are music ofmdescnb able beauty a nd emotion. To the other, it is only "so much horse hair scraping over cat-gut One medium of communica tion two en tirely different i espouses. One man's cars col lect the ibra Rev. Althouse tions and he finds them plcasiuable The other man, however, hears onh haish, shrill sounds and wants oniv to flick the dial to another station. Both And Neither Who is correct? Holh and neither, for the fact is that we do not all respond to the same at temps to communicate. What is meaningful to some is a puzzle to others. It does no good to berate another because he re sponds differently to some of the things that seem good to me. I’eople are different and God has made us that way If we are trulv conceinedabout communicating with someone, we must be careful to choose lan guage that is meaningful to them. Jesus seldom used what might be called ' religious language - ’ m his preaching and teaching. He used figures of speech, analogies, and illustrations that were drawn from 'the experiences’- of dus hearers. Of prime importance for him was the truth he wished to communi cate. The form of the communi cation, the package in which the truth was wrapped, was adjusted according to his audience. Beyond Sheep Christians today often forget this and cannot understand why they are not more successful in getting across the message of Read Lancaster Farming Now Is The Time ... By Max Smith, Lancaster County Agent To Raise Dairy Herd Replacements With the favorable outlook foi the dauy mdusliy no doubt the demand for milk cows will be stiong foi the next seveial yeais Since Lancastei County includes many of the best herds ot dauy cattle in the cou'ntiy, it seems advisable that all produceis ;aise the maximum number of heifer calves, il the heifeis cannot be put into the milking held, theie is little doubt that other dauymen m othei pails of the state and the country will want them To Prevent Undesiiable Milk Flavors Olf-flavored milk is usually the lesult of the dairy cow absorbing the odors of various feeds and impaiting them to her milk How The feeding of silage to a milk good news. They speak of "shep herds” and "sheep” to people who have spent all their lives in the concrete cities. We use "churchy” .vords and Sunday school ex pressions that no longer hav e the power to communicate. We ask not only that the outsider will listen to us, but also that he learn our vocabulary too. Our task, however, is not only to find new language, but of going beyond language. .Tesus not only preached and taught the gospel, he was the embod ment jf it. Ours is particularly a day and age in which men w.'l le -pond more readily to wha‘ they see than what they hear. If they hear us proclaim Tor Hod so loved the world . . . , ’ out see that we have something - ss than the w hole w orld in mind, he message will not get across. If they hear us exalt a crunfied I’hrist, but see us shv awa\ trom costiv involvement for otrers, hcv will not believe the good revs. If they hear us sing, .lust is 1 am,” but demonstrate that i\e don’t want them just aa they ire, the song will be in \ am Back To The Source In oui city a number of 'hurthes and inteiested indivi duals have combined their re quires to provide a coffeehouse nimsh'’ to rootless older ' outh md young adults. Although it ias been in operation just a few •nonths, young people, already ynow that it is a place where they ne wanted and accepted, where someone is interested in them and hur problems Named The Source,' the coffee house is staffed 3V volunteers from various ihurches who wait on tables, .vash dishes, and sit down to talk when dialogue and conversation are desired. Sooner or later, many of the /oung people want to know: 'Uhy do you people do this? Why are you concerned witn us 1 ' ’ Inevitably, the answers of the volunteers lead them back to the source of their concern: the love of Jesus Christ. Love in action is still one of he best ways of communicating he good news. It takes usbeyond words. T- -% ii««i en cuttum copyrighted by (he Division sf Christum Education, Nohenol Council of' the Churches of Christ in the U S. A Releesed by Community Press Service) ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE SUNDAY Market Reports To Order Fertiliser SMITH