16—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 25,1971 WASHINGTON REPORT Aft Congressman Edwin D. EsMeman IMi DldricN-Pmiuyhnuila IBIH There is an urban crisis in America. But the crisis that we’ve all heard so much about and spent so many billions of dollars trying to solve may not be the real crisis at all. Urban decay may not be the result of teeming ghettos, blighted downtown areas, lack of adequate mass transit systems, insufficient personal income for city residents or one of a hundred other items on which we -have centered our attention. Instead, these things may be symptoms rather than the disease itself. Some study during my recuperation has convinced me that the real disease is far more fundamental. It is the loss of a sense of community. A sense of community means simply that a person must have some place where he or she has identity. Each individual must feel that he has roots somewhere. It can’t be a vague somewhere like a State or even a city. It must be a place small enough that other people know the person and the person knows the other people. There were always such places within our cities—South Philly in Philadelphia, Brooklyn in New York, Bridgeport in Chicago, and on a smaller scale, but just as important, the Hill in Lancaster and Northside in Lebanon. These Red Rose developed this program of feeding that will deliver hogs to market in 150 days! It took research, more research, and still more research until the most effective combination of feeds and feeding programs was possible. The Programmed Hog is your way of raisin* healthy, meaty hogs going to market in less tim? It’s a complete nutrition and management story, reducing the cost of pork by converting more feed to meat, while maintaining growth and promoting healthier litters. You owe it to yourself to try the Programmed Hog system and the Red Rose swine feeds that make up the program. Don’t wait another day. Walter Binkley & Son Lititz Brown & Rea, Inc. Atglen Elverson Supply Co. Elverson L T. Geib Estate Manheim I. B. Groybill & Son Strasburg L Musser Heisey & Son R. D. #2, Mt. Joy, Pa. Heistand Bros. Elizabethtown Red Rose Form Service, Inc. N. Church St., Quarryville David B. Hurst were communities as tightly-knit and small-townish as any village in a rural area. They were places to put down roots and find self identity. But, systematically, our modern society has gone about destroying those communities within urban areas. Federal programs have been directed toward the whole city with no regard for their effect on the self contained communities within the city. Urban planners have' sent in the bulldozers to level old neighborhoods in the name of, redevelopment. City govern ments have taken more and more, power out of thejiands of neigh borhood officials and con centrated that power in city halls. Social reformers have thrust housing patterns into without regard to the established character of those areas. As old neighborhoods have been destroyed, the sehse of community has died. It is im possible for an individual to identify with something as big as the whole city of New York or even the whole city of Lancaster. There has been a loss of a place to cal] home, and this loss has led to the urban decay that we see today. G. R. Mitchell, Inc. Refton, Pa, Mountville Feed Service Mountville Musser Forms, Inc. Columbia Martin's Feed Mill Ephrata, Pa. Chas. E. Sauder & Sons Terre Hill Shelly Brothers R. D. 2, Manheim, Pa. E. P. Spotts, Inc. Honey Brook H. M. Stauffer & Sons, Inc. Witmer Some people simply quit the cities to find a community elsewhere. They moved to the suburbs and established new neighborhoods where each person could feel that be had roots. But these people took with them the talents and the tax dollars that the cities needed to grow. And, therefore, the urban crisis is partially a result of those who fled. Other people remained within the city, but lacking a sense of identity, they became aimless in their outlook. Property deterioration means little to the man who could care less what his neighbor thinks. It is easier to begin taking a welfare check when there is no one to answer to except some bureaucrat down town. Education has less per sonal importance when your child is bused across town instead of' sent to the neighborhood school. Each of these factors, and others like them, have con tributed to the deterioration of the cities. There is still a chance that the sense of community might be regained. Some of the recent cries from within several large cities have been for more com munity control. It’s important that we listen to those cries, because it may be the only way the cities will be saved. Dollars alone won’t do the job. GET MORE FROM EACH MAN! | PUTTING on extra labor during the peak seasons is mighty expensive. Finding man power at those times is difficult. Makes a lot more sense to get more work from the manpower you have ... by putting your labor force on a bigger tractor. That s what we call workpower... the real measure of a man’s worth... whether its your personal worth or that of a hired man. Allis-Chalmers One-Ninety and One-Ninety XT Sei ics 111 tractors can give you that extra measure of workpower. And the savings from covering more acres per man hour can add up to bigger profits. Going°G«at? the BIS ° rangC ° nCS from Going Orange is A % Grumelli Farm Service " Quarryville, Pa. ALLIS CHALMERS Dr. Guss Honored Dr. Samuel B. Guss, professor of veterinary science Extension at Pennsylvania State Univer sity, has been named “Extension Veterinarian of the Year” by the American Association of Ex tension Veterinarians. Dr. Guss, a past president of the PVMA, was honored at the Association’s recent annual meeting in Detroit for his con tributions to animal health and veterinary medicine. There are 84 Extension veterinarians in the United States. A native of Reading, Dr. Guss received his doctor of veterinary medicine dgree from the WE NOW HAVE SEVERAL NEW Trojan Hybrids Available All Trojan Seed will be of normal cytoplasm. Order Your Seed From EUGENE HOOVER^^I Lititz, R. D. 3 569-07^6 Nissley Form Service N. G. Myers & Son Washington Boro, Pa. Rheems, Pa. Roy H. Buch, Inc. Ephrata, R.D. 2 University of Pennsylvania in 1943. His major field has been diseases of cattle, sheep and goats. Call Us Now To serve the Lancaster County farm community bet ter, we maintain two phone ers and advertisers can also •each us through 626-2191 (ask for Lancaster Farming) and avoid a toll call from the Akron, Ephrata and Man heim exchanges. L. H. Brubaker Lancaster, Pa.