D22—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 17,1982 Speak out for farming; call a Congressman WASHINGTON D.C. - Last Friday the Agriculture Council of America (65 members of Congress from both political parties) and Farmland Industries announced plans for a national hearing on the farm economy, conducted by telephone on May 11, with an accompanying mail-m survey on solutions to agriculture’s current problems. A bank of 50 telephones will be set up in the Cannon House Office Building Caucus Room. Members of Congress, their aides, officials of Executive Branch departments and representatives of in dependent agencies with economic responsibilities have been invited to take calls from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m (EOT). The purpose of this farmers’ oversight hearmg is to dramatize to the Washington audience the depth of farmers’ and ranchers’ difficulties and to try to stimulate a broader discussion of feasible remedies. “It is not an attack on the ad ministration or anyone else,” said Allen Paul, president of ACA. “It is an attempt to find solutions, acceptable to a majority of the interests represented in our government, by discussing these too-long-ignored problems with officials of all backgrounds—rural, suburban or urban,” he said. In 1980 and 1981, U.S. farm m- Wmmmmmmmammmmmtm ARCADIAN" liquid gives a Erofitable boost to alfalfa y top dressing in the fall or winter. Herbicides like Princep - K . e . rb . IPC1 PC - f ca " a,s ° be