—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 23,1968 4 from Where We Stand ... Violent Demonstrations There seems to be a worldwide spon taneous movement among young people to resort to violent demonstrations on univer sity campuses as a means of resolving any grievance that disturbs them. Many look upon these demonstrations as a legitimate rebellion against the shortcomings of the established order of governments and so cieties. Each generation is said to be wiser than the preceding one, thus we assume the dissident students are groping for a better order with a vision not given to parents and college authorities. During the months of October and November of 1967, students staged 71 dem onstrations on 62 college campuses. Were these demonstrations based upon deep philosophical and moral premises? There is reason for doubt on that score. Only two demonstrations were attributed directly to the war in Viet Nam. It ranked with college social rules and safer road crossings. At the bottom of the list of causes for the demon strations were campus building programs and the quality of higher education. Only one demonstration was attributed to each. Indirectly, the war was a factor in 27 dem onstrations against a chemical company manufacturing napalm. Three demonstra tions each were attributed to compulsory R.OTC and the quality of cafeteria food. The foregoing is taken from a tally made by the National Student Association which is based upon student demonstrations in the U. S. only. Mr. George F. Kennan, former Ambas sador to Russia and currently a professor at the Institute of Advanced Study, writing in The New York Times Magazine, presents views concerning the radical left on campus that may well stir misgivings in the minds of even the most tolerant. Among other things, he says, "Never has there been an era when the problems of public policy even approached in their complexity those by which our society is confronted today. . . The understanding of these problems is something to which one could well give years of disciplined and restrained study, years of the scholar’s detachment, years of readiness to reserve judgment while evi dence is being accumulated. And this being so, one is struck to see such massive cer tainties already present in the minds of people who not only have not studied very much but presumably are not studying a great deal, because it is hard to imagine that the activities to which this aroused por tion of our student population gives itself are ones readily compatible with quiet and successful study.” Mr. Kennan finds the greatest fault with the student protesters on the grounds that Farm News This Week The Breneman Family Is Interested In Farming Page 1 National Farmers Union Wants Farm Act Extension Page 17 County Farmers Meet With Legislators Page 1 George Cogley Wins Swine Carcass Show Page 1 Farm And Home Sets Membership Loan Meeting Page 1 LANCASTER FARMING Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly P. 0. Box 266 • Lititz, Pa. 17543 Office 22 E Main St., Lititz, Pa. 17543 Phone Lancaster 394-3047 or Lititz 626-2191 Everett R Newswanger, Editor Robert G. Campbell, Advertising Director Subscription price: $2 per year in Lancaster County; $3 elsewhere Established November 4, 1955 Published every Saturday by Lancaster Farming, Lititz,' Pa. , ■ Second Class Postage paid at Lititz, Pa. 17543 Member of Newspaper Farm Editors Assn. they offer no constructive program. As he says, .. if you find a system inadequate, it is not enough simply to demonstrate . .-. anger . . ..If the student left had a program . . . many of us . . . could view its protests with respect. . .” Another disturbing fact in Mr. Kennan’s view is that, “These people also pose a problem in the quality of their citizenship. One thing they all seem to have in common the angry ones as well as the quiet ones is a complete rejection of, or indifference to, the political system of this country.” He points out that the quiet ones the hippies and flower people turn their backs upon our political system as thought it did not concern them. The angry ones reject the discipline which, as a sys tem of authority, it unavoidably entails. On, the current notion that civil disobedience is acceptable if the perpetrators are willing to accept the penalties, Mr. Kennan has this to say: “Some people, who accept our poli tical system, believe that they have a right to disregard it and to violate the laws that have flowed from it so long as they are pre pared ... to accept the penalties establish ed for such behavior. I am sorry; I cannot agree. The violation of law is not, in the moral and philosophic sense, a privilege that lies offered for sale with a given price tag, like an object in a supermarket, avail able to anyone who has the price and is will ing,to pay for it.” All in all, Mr. Kennan’s views will strike a lot of people with the force of bed rock logic at a time when our permissive society needs such logic in heroic doses. ★ ★ ★ ★ According to J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, “Crime must be reduced by eliminating the huge profits and the soft justice which attract criminal-minded individuals. Ava lanches of crime and terrorism cannot be tolerated in a society of free men. Either we win the war against crime or the price less heritage which we cherish will be de stroyed. Full justice is needed stern jus tice. We need justice which keeps the bal ance true and affords the law - abiding public an even break. We need justice which deals swiftly and surely with the criminal, convincing justice which means a quick arrest, prompt prosecution, and sub stantial punishment of the guilty lawbreak er.” At least that’s the way it looks from where we stand. ★ ★ ★ Across The Fence Row Credit: a person who can't pay, gets another person who can’t pay to guarantee that he can pay. Charles Dickens Every man has one thing he can do bet ter than anybody else read his own hand writing. Times Recorder, Zanesville, Ohio SCOTTSVILLE, KY., NEWS: “Karl Marx would turn over in his grave if he knew -this, but instead of a ‘handful of pri vileged capitalists’ tightly grasping the reins of industry, as he predicted, in Ameri ca 20 million and more people, (more than a quarter of the adult population), own stock in some 6,700 of the nation’s indus trial concerns . . . and 35 per cent of these ‘capitalists’ are housewives and widows!” Weather Forecast The five-day forecast for the period Saturday through next Wednesday calls for temperatures to average near or below nor mal. The daytime highs are expected in the upper 40’s and overnight lows in the mid 30’s. Near seasonable temperatures with little day to day change. Normal high-low is 53-33. ; ' • Rain may total greater than onfe-half inch occurring over the week : end. i Withered Branch Sometime!, however, men and men, at they have climbed the idee to " tucceii," have cut uiemielves off from the source of their lucceti. John Wesley found that many of the poor people who were converted under his ministry became moderately pcosperoua because of their new way of life. Unfortunately, as many of diem grew in material success, they i i nM. .J l L l iil to drift away from their "iIS? *’ faith. They became "too busy a Av r . for the fdlowship that lifted them of their poverty. Weeley’a , «. C H°l^r?wi^«n t Tu, dBolutlon: Rlf tho,e Who gain all avidly read aroy book on can> an( j aave they can, will likewise give all they can.* collection of tne Gictt finmicipt* ii Biwftvi ths a! W®*** prosperity. K tends to seduce us and photographs of the sixteenth away f rom our source. We grow further and further away from systematically an d, as we do, we find hunted down. our power begin to dwindle. It borne of Lln- ina y no t happen suddenly, but coin s memora-|jj t by last, overextended ble sayings were direction, we find we committed ~to bave exhausted our God-given memory. power and find nothing but ° n ®. a emptiness where once Christ dwelt years after us< «jf a man does not.abide great project had j n me> he is cast forth as abranch ~ * \ e , n Jr? ® un * and withers ...” (John 15: someone said to him; "Do you g rsV). know what you remind me very *' much of Abraham Matched Set Smiling a LincohiMique smile, the Jesus said «... unless you other replied: "That is under- abide me » (j o hn 15:4), but standable, for I have lived with how do you go about "abiding” him for many years. j n him? We have already seen THE SOURCE Lcuon for Much 24,1968 Dae.mhi* u: m how one young man lived for a 10 Kesemoie Him , number of years under the in- It is sometimes said that when fluence of the words and deeds we live with someone long 0 f Abraham Lincoln and became enough, whether in a literal or fom him. We may abide in Jesus figurative sense, we may very i n foe same manner. He himself well become quite like them. Part- said . «if . . . my words abide in ners in marriage, for example, you » (John 15 : 7). As a young often grow to resemble each oth- man immersed himself in the ut er. Adopted children may some- ternances c f Lincoln, so the fames seem to bear the likeness of Christian may do the same with their foster parents. fo e teachings of Jesus Christ. It is in this same way that a _jf Christ is the "true vine,” the person may grow in his fellow- branches are bound together too. ship with Christ, until, at last, nqbis is my commandment, that he begins to take on charactens- y OU love one another as I have tics that reflect the influence of the f ove< i you.” The Christian who Master. This was the challenge remains close to his source, life Jesus set before his disciples: "By fo j esU s Christ,- also finds it tins my Father is glorified, that brings him close to his fellow you, bear much Truit, and so men. It is impossible to have one ?k°*Tbc?7i “^Pl® B (J 0 ! 111 without the other. The source , compels us to be one. This power to "bear much ... t - ~ 5 ~ , , leased on eunmes copyrighted by Hie Division fruit” finds its source rn a close, of Chnshua Educahon, Nahonal C.uuc.l ol th. living relationship with Christ. "I Churches of Christ in the U. S. A. Released by am the vine,” says Jesus, "you Caeiiwiiii/ frea semnj are my branches. He who abides in me, and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing” (John 15:5 RSV). Anyone who has ever TRY A CLASSIFIED AD! To Spray For Garlic Wild garlic is one of the very first weeds to grow in the spring and needs immediate at tention Many pasture fields are infested with this weed often called wild onion. Dairymen must be certain the milking herd does not get access to any kind of forage including garlic because of the very undersir able onion flavor. Control calls for spraying when the young plants are 3 to 6 inches high with IVz pounds per acre of the low volatile ester form of 2,4rD. Cattle should be kept from the area for at least 10 days after spraying. To Manage Herd Carefully Dairymen that will be utiliz ing early pasture in the next few weeks are cautioned about permitting the cows to graze lush forage close to the milking ted to do it *on hli own* knows s truth of Jeaui* claim. He U the mm of whatever power wt we. NOW IS THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent period. It is suggested that -the herd graze only following the milking time and be off the area at least 4 hours before'the next milking. A well ventilated barn will also help reduce grassy flavors. To Plan For Maximum Output Today’s farmer must be a good manager and plan to get the greatest output from every farm unit. Yields are on the in crease and we should not be satisfied with the production of a generation ago. New varieties, thicker population, and greater use of fertilizer are partly re sponsible for increased yields. Some local acres of permanent pasture that are tillable will give more feed nutrients from a crop of corn for silage than to remain in pasture. Planning and managing must get more -atten tion.