—Lancaster Farming, Saturday. March 2fl, 1969 4 From Where We Indefensible Coercive tactics and intimidation on a nationwide scale in an effort to organize agricultural labor show evidence of back firing, judging by public reaction to at tempts to boycott California grape grow ers who have refused to submit to union de mands. During recent months, supermar kets and retailers all over the country, as well as consumers, have been made the vic tims of an unprecedented drive to bring so called collective bargaining to the nation’s farms beginning with the grape produc ers. The evidence that this type of organiz ing may do more harm than good from the standpoint of the unions comes in the form of a survey of consumers that reveals only 31 per cent approve the actions of grape boycotters. The survey covers a typi cal area around Minneapolis, Minnesota. One of the most objectionable phases of the boycott, according to the survey, has been the effort to enlist church support. Eighty two per cent of those responding to the sur vey believe that it is not right for a church to ask its members to refrain from buying grapes. They do not consider it a church matter. Using consumers and merchants as weapons to bring agricultural producers to their knees is indefensible. If a supermarket can be forced to remove grapes from its shelves under duress dr threats, the same tactic can be applied across the board of production and distribution. The principle that has been at issue in the grape boycott is that of the free market and the right of merchants to operate .in what they believe to be the best interests of their customers. Since the boycotts violate a basic principle of the marketplace, they deserve and should expect the disfavor of consumers, as well as merchants. Are We Intelligent? The late Adlai E. Stevenson, statesman and politician, once said, “We travel to gether, passengers on a little spaceship . . . preserved from annihilation only by the care, the work, and I will say the love we give to our fragile craft.” Anyone who has seen the remarkable photographs taken of the earth by the crew of the Apollo 8 must humbly acknowledge the prophetic truth of Mr. Stevenson’s words. From 200,000 miles or more out in space, the earth appears to be a body of transcendent and fragile beauty. The astronauts called it “the good earth.” And as Mr. Stevenson intimated, it is a fragile earth supporting life as man knows it on a finely balanced combination of cosmic circumstances that are slowly being altered by man himself. Only in recent years have scientists suspected the many ways in which human beings, by their numbers and technological achievements, are beginning to threaten human existence A part of this threat Farm News This Week Gerald Martin & Solanco Star In FFA County Meet Page 1 Raising Prime Veal For Aristocratic Restaurants Is Profitable Business Page 1 LANCASTER FARMING Lancaster County’s Own Farm Weekly P. O. 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 1 every Saturday by Lancaster Farming, Lititz, Pa. Second Class Postage paid at Lititz, Pa. 17543, 4 . Member of Newspaper Farm Editors Assn/ s Stand. .. stems from ignorance of the nature of the life-sustaining forces of earth, plus a stunn ing lack of perception of the real meaning of what we are pleased to call the population explosion. Dr, John H. Rediske, former Atomic Energy Commission Fellow and now head of a forest tree sciences group at a large timber company, writes of peo ple and resources in a manner that in delibly impresses a lay reader. He points out, “If one could compress all geologic time, the 4.5 billion years since the earth was born, into one year some startling facts regarding the recency of life on this ball of rock would become evident ... let us assume that the earth is born on the first of January It is May before single called living organisms appear in the warm sheltered coastal waters. In the first week of December the primeval forests rise from the lowlands. Twelve days later dinosaurs are roaming the earth and the first mam mals appear the day after Christmas. At 10 p.m. on December 31st primitive man makes his appearance. The pyramids are built a minute before midnight. Fifty-seven seconds later Christopher Columbus dis covers America and we enter the Industrial Revolution about one second before the New Year.” These words of Dr. Rediske show how brief man’s existence has been. He goes on to show that in spite of this briefness, man is multiplying at a rate and creating condi tions that can terminate his sojourn on earth in a matter of seconds, geologically speaking. Again, he uses a dramatic ana logy. To place population growth in an understandable framework, he compresses the 2000 years from the birth of Christ into one 24-hour day. And here is what he finds, beginning Sunday at 12 midnight. There are some 190 million people on earth at that in stant. At 7:48 Monday evening, nearly 20 hours later, the population has doubled. It doubles again only 2 hours and 24 minutes later. And again in less than one hour. And yet again, at 11:36 p.m., the population doubles for the fourth time since Christ was born to yield the present figure of approxi mately three billion people. Twenty-four minutes later, at midnight (the year 2000)., it will double for the fifth time and six bil lion human beings will inhabit the earth. And by the year 2070, at the same rate of progression, the earth’s population will be an incredible 25 billion! Dr. Rediske then goes into the real stickler, the resources of nature, about which most of us know little or nothing that will be called upon to support the teeming billions of persons who are just over the horizon. He tells how the most essential ele ment of life, oxygen, is dependent upon the photosynthetic activity of the seas, the for est and growing plants. Most of us think of these resources in terms of food and forest products. But one of their main functions is to proiide oxygen for present and future generations. Observes Dr. Rediske, “It is alarming that, with his tremendous power to alter his environment, man does not even compre hend the questions involved in his survival, much less know the answers. Considering man’s demonstrated talent for error, one might ask, half-seriously; ‘ls there intelli gent life on Earth?’,” and if so, does' it know how long it plans to stay? Local Weather Forecast (From the U. S. Weather Bureau at the Harrisburg State Airport) The five-day forecast calls for tempera tures to average much below normal with daytime highs in the 30’s and over-night lows in the teens to mid 20’s. Turning cold er Sunday and continued cold the remain der of the period. The normal high-low for the period is 56-35. t Precipitation may total one-half inch in the North and West portions of the area to less than one-fourth inch in tße Southeast, water equivalent. Chance of snow in the in ' terior Saturday night and snow flumes the remainder of'the period. ' k ’ v — ! THE VICTOR lesion for March 30,1969 Bmhnvoi ScrfcAir*- U. 43 through 1 541 - DavftttMwf ngt tsotoh 53. The twenty-four hours that comprised Jesus’ last night and day, the first Maundy Thrusday evening l and Good Friday, were twenty-four hours of terrible suf fering for the man from Nazareth. The ordeal which we call his "Passion,” be gan at the scene of the Last Sup per when he darkly forecast the treachery of one of his own disciples. It grew in the garden of Gethsemane as he found them Rev. Althouse too- fatigued to share with him the long night of prayerful preparation. That inner torment came to a climax when Judas, one of the Twelve, led the Temple soldiers to the very spot and betrayed Jesus with a kiss. “He was despised...” In his moment of great need his discigles fled from the scene, leaving Him alone with bis cap tors. None of them, not even the brave-talking Peter, stood by him as he underwent the ordeal of a hearing before the high priest and tire Sanhedrin. As he stood be fore these authorities, he was slandered, abused, and struck on the face. Without sleep, tired in body, and sorrowful of soul, he was forced to appear before the powers of Jerusalem and was sub jected to the same disgraceful pro ceedings each time. He was stared at and mocked like an animal or madman.'’'He'was treated with brutal contempt and no one raised a voice of protest or concern. While in the palace of Pilate, be was abused by the Boman soldiers who beat him and made sport of him. They put a robe on him and pressed down a crown of sharp thorns upon his head. Later," as he was exposed Read Lancaster Farming For Full Market Reports To Kecord Pesticides I’d like to repeat the sugges- for the milking herd. Cows that tion that it is very important are grazed on lush growth early for every farmer to keep accu- in the spring should be given a rate records of his use of all feeding of dry matter first and types of pesticides on both his then removed from the pasture livestock and his crops. Our Ex- area at least 4 hours prior to the tension Service has record next milking time. ‘ blanks available for this use; they are available for the ask- To Beware Of Wild Pets i ing. These records may be very The keeping of wild animals useful if food products are ques- as pets is to be discouraged. Honed for chemical residues. ' Monkeys, skunks, raccoons, K „ zards and snakes make unust cal -. To Manage Herd Carefully p e ts but they may-be-carriers The pasture season- is ap- of dangerous human disea ips preaching when it is very im- and infections. 1 Tuberculosis portant for milk producers to may be 'carried by monkeys, handle the milking iqws very rabies -virus’ is often present in carefully; that is, if the .herd is 'the saliva of skunks; bites from to be grazed, or to be Ted green--lizards and snakes may not be chopped material. Succulant for- deadly poisonous but may p ro age may transmit a grassy fla- duce dangerohs infections. 1 >o ,vor to the milk and cause quali- mestic animals make the safest ty-problems. Pastures including pets. to hostile crowds that had ed at the palace, no one stood forth to defend him or plead for his release. Instead, the crowds loudly called for bia death and chose a murderer to be released in his stead. “And rejected...” Exhausted by his physical and emotional ordeal, a heavy cross beam was laid upon his shoulders and he was made to struggle with it up the narrow, winding streets of Jerusalem in disgrace befoc* the cursing, Jeering mobs. When he stumbled under its [none of his friends were them to help him, only a bystander who was forced assist him with his burden. Having reached the desolate Golgotha outside the city, he was subjected to even greater torture. Great nails were driven into his hands and feet. Roughly, the cross-beam was fitted to an up right pole and he was jerked into j position. The weight of his body sent terrible pains racing through ,his hands and arms and 1 shoulders. He looked down from the cross. What he beheld sharper the pain within. Several soldiers were casting dice for hli, .clothing. Curious crowds gawked; at him while others paraded, round him, hurling taunts, curses,, and insults. Some of them spit upon him to show their contempt. { He saw also the pitiful form op his weeping mother and a few! sorrowful friends, all helpless in, their horror. “A Man of Sorrows” Added to the pain was « raging thirst the loss of blood, and a combination of symptom? that-guaranteed to makehis death one of slow agony. In the midst of all this, a hateful voice spat out at him from below; "Hesaved others; he cannot save himself. Let the Christ, the King of Israel, come down now from the cross, that we may see and believe.* (Mark 15:31,32 RSV) General Booth of theSalvatlon, Army once declared-that: "It is, precisely because he would noli come down that we believe in l him.” Jesus stayed on the cross, because he was the Son of Godt not in spite of it. Death could! not take from him his commltL ment Thus'/ the cross is th« 3 symbol of the victor, not the; victim. (Smml «n •uHiriM MpyrifhlMl by th« Dlvistar 1 W Christian Bduemtfn, Nelienel Cawdl il At Churchas «f Christ in 1h« tf. &A» Mimj j CammvnHy frvtt Svrvlct.) J NOW IS THE TIME... By Max Smith Lancaster County Agent wild garlic should not be usei