n Please send me color catalog bn the I Name I Address ✓ herokee horse stock trailers and GN flatbeds State Food supply {Continued from Page 122) courage to gut it so plainly, is that we have the energy supply to insure a high standard of living and the arms to defend it, so let’s let others starve. I find this morally unacceptable, but I would at least respect them (so-called intellectuals) more if they stated it plainly rather than couchmg in psuedo-mtellectual sophis ms.” In his address to the farm group, Krull stated that many of them may be wondering why he was delving into such a topic, but explained the tie-in. “Many of these same critics are also leveling charges at our farm production practices. There is a world energy crisis and it will undoubtedly get worse,” he claimed. Noting that agriculture uses a significant amount of energy for fertilizer production and fuel, he stated that abundant, Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 21,1979 inexpensive energy was a prime reason that farmers have been able to produce so efficiently. “My job is to breed hybrids that can maximize yield under management, but there are no types that can get by without water and fertilizer. If we expect to eat, we will have to allocate the energy supply to do so, even if it means trade-offs for other energy uses. “I, somehow, am not very sympathetic to the suggestion of using less energy for adequate food production m order that the energy can be used so people can continue to drive their over-sized cars from their over-sized, over-heated homes to their over-heated offices.” Krull closed by saying that PSU Awards (Continued from Page 121) tension Award from the American Dairy Science Association, Distinguished Service Award from the American Farm Bureau, Livestock Improvement Award from the Italian Government, and New Jersey Department of Agriculture Distinguished Service Award. Other honors include the George H. Cook Memorial Anti-nuclear meet set STATE COLLEGE - In the aftermath of the Three Mile Island, Umt 2, accident, .Pennsylvania's En vironmental Coalition on Nuclear Power (ECNP) announced recently that its statewide meeting on April 21 in Harrisburg will be open to all public-interest groups and concerned citizens through the state who want to join ECNP in opposing continued use of nuclear power. Plans will be laid for coordinating public and political activities to bring some people are being heard discussing the balance of nature in “hushed tones.” They do not, however, ad vocate closing medical schools or starting a major war, and neither dees he. People must keep in mind that there are limits to population and there are limits to the environment, and that we must continue to modify they mythical balance of nature if all nations are to survive. “I, for one, am for people rather than other species. It is perhaps old-fashioned, but I tend to take literally the Biblical injunction ‘to be fruitful and multiply and replenish the earth, and subdue it.’ “Our best chances for the future lie with farmers such as yourselves, efficiently producing tremendous amounts of food with modern agricultural technology,” Krull told the group. Award from the New Jersey College of Agriculture and Distinguished Alumnus Award from Penn State. Perry and his wife, the former Alberta Vail, of Erie, are the parents of three children: Mrs. Edward Gruber, -Jr., of West Chester; Wilbur Perry, of Lake Forest, Illinois; and Howard Perry, of Miami, Florida. about the orderly shutdown of all nuclear facilities af fecting the people of Penn sylvania and elsewhere. Attendees will coordinate plans for Pennsylvania participation in the proposed national demonstration against nuclear power tentatively scheduled to be held in Washington, D.C. in early May. For further information, contact Dr. Judith Johnsrud, Co-Director, Enviromental Coalition on Nuclear Power, 433 Orlando Avenue, State 'College, Pa. 16801, or phone 814-237-3900. 123
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