Corn Becomes ‘King’ Of (Continued from Pago 1) car will not be hard to start. In addition, they held train ing seminars for 500 mechanics to explain what ethanol is and that ethanol has been driven a trillion miles. After the promo tion program, 95 percent of the filling stations in Cleveland use an ethanol blend. Nebraska state police have been using ethanol burning vehicles for 12 years. The follow-up to the Cleve land campaign is to tell every one about the success of the first campeign. Ethanol reduced car bon monxide by millions of tons, the gas price did not rise, cars started, and gas mileage did not go down. “We are taking credit for the ethanol fuels program and what it did to clean up the air in Cleveland, what it did to create jobs, and what it did for the environment,” Wagner said. In Peoria, Illinois, 14 new diesel buses are running on 95 percent pure ethanol. The fuel has 5 percent gasoline so people do not drink it. Ohio com grow ers brought one of those buses to their state’s ag day and took the governor, press corps and legislators for a ride. "When you get the press on their knees, smelling tail pipes, and finding there is no carbon coming out, you make a firm believer out of them," Wagner said. This is the message we must tell.” Wagner reported that in testi mony in Washington for the Clean Air Act, when Eric Bonn testified for ethanol, he sat a shot glass of pure ethanol and pure gasoline in front of him. At the conclusion of his testimony, Buffalo' FARM EQUIPMENT CONSERVATION TILLAGE LEADER THE BUFFALO CULTIVATOR is the most advanced cultivator on the market, with four models to match your operation It has the rugged design for performing in the heavy residue of ridge planted fields. Rugged, heavy duty construction with strength where strength is needed. UUUUI GUIDANCE SYSTEM is so accurate and simple it takes the chore out of cultivating. It eliminates cultivator blight and reduces herbicide costs by allowing close cultivation to the row. The SCOUT is great for contours and sidehills. _ 539 Falling Spring Road ■ P.O. Box 219 Call For Dealer Located ■ Chambersburg, PA 17201-0219 Nearest You —' * 717-263-9111 RYDER Supply he drank the shot of ethanol. But all the 29 or 30 oil presidents in attendance refused to drink their gasoline. “It would have killed them,” Wagner said. “That’s the story we must tell.” A unique project for the Ohio com growers has been the spon sorship of an ethanol burning race car. This “funny car” is dri ven by Mark Thomas, a farm boy from Canton. Thomas has won three straight world championships with the spon sored car. The com growers have spent $32,000, but 62 mil lion people saw Thomas on ESPN and another 400,000 saw him in person. “It’s the best pro ject we have done dollar for dol lar,” Wagner said. When the Bush adminstra tion announced in October that ethanol would be part of refor mulated gasoline in the Gean Air Act, “We hit a home run,” Wagner said. “But now a new adminstra tion needs to be convinced. Ethanol is a friend of the envir onmentlist. If we can keep our research data to them, we are going to win. But big oil has 27 full-time lobbyists working in Washington. The National Com Growers has three persons doing everything. “Big oil doesn’t want to give up their maiket share, but we only want a small part of it. As we say in our advertisements, ‘lO percent blend takes 25 per cent of the carbon monxide out.’ We think that’s a very good trade-off.” Another research project supported by the Ohio com growers is coal desulfurization. The research is in the later stages and if successful, will be Marketplace supported by the coal industry. The process would use 300 mil lion bushels of com just to desulfurize Ohio coal produc tion. Other states have even more coal than Ohio, and the prospect of major com usage is great if it works. Other new com products in various stages of research and development include a charcoal lighter that comes out as a foam and causes no smoke or odor. Clay pigeons made out of com starch, bio-degradable bags and fast food packageing are in the works for marketing. Also a road deicer that is completely benign to the underground water and is non-corrosive and a super-absorbant baby diaper can be made from com. At the end of his presenta tion, Wagner gave a dramatic demonstration with a small amount of a com product pow der placed in a glass of water. Within seconds the powder had turned the water into a glob of jelly-like substance with no stickiness or odor. He said one pound of this powder will absorb 1400 pounds of water in 30 seconds, and in 60 seconds it will drink a ton of water. “The potential for new pro ducts made from com is excit ing,” Wagner said. “But the challenges are many. Big oil doens’t want to lose its market and Congress isn’t interested. In addition, we have a new administration, and even our neighbors to deal with. No one else is going to help you. We need to join hands as farmers and meet the challengs of the next century.” **! Buffdlo. * 6200 High Residue Cultivator Superior Performance in All High Residue Conditions Minimum Till, No-Till or Ridge Till No other cultivator... cultivates like BUFFALO • Easy access with 4*x6’ main frame mounting tube • Quick and accurate depth band settings with positive, quick-set, single-wrench adjustment • Unequaled toolbar height allows more crop clearance and residue flow • Precision-ground on-inch parallel linkage pins and "composite’ bushings provide strength and lasting durability • Strong heat-treated sweep shanks that have unmatched durability • Adjustable sweep mounting brackets for fine tuning the pitch of the sweep for superior soil penetration and flow • Large 18" Cutting Coulters with 12* depth bands slice through the high-residue left by today's minimum till, no-till/ridge till high bushel crops • Options available • Open-top or hooded shields • Ridging wings • Anhydrous knives • Side-dress anhydrous kit • Sweep fertilizer tube attachment • Spring cushion shanks ♦ The Scout Guidance System Corn Talk, Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 17,1993—Page Recently reported research from a farmer-managed trial at the University of Wisconsin has confirmed what many Pen nsylvania no-tillers have been seeing already that com no tilled into a fall killed sod is an effective practice. In studies recently reported in the Journal of Production Agriculture, no-till com in a fall killed sod was compared to no till com in a spring killed sod and to a tillage program. The tillage programs varied depending on the grower involved and ranged from a chisel-disk system to a mold board plow. The tests were repeated on six different sites in central and western Wisconsin. Herbicide programs for killing the sod varied but usually included Roundup for the fall kill and split applications of atrazine plus an application of Gramox one for the spring kill. Averaged over the six sites, com yields were highest with the fall kill no-till treatment r _ v €®lM TALK NIWO PENNSYLVANIA MASTER CORN GROWERS ASSOC., INC. Fall-Kill Best For No-Tilling After Greg W. Roth (GdWEKf Sod (120 bushels/acre), and lowest with the spring kill no-till treat ment (98 bushels/acre). Yields using the growers existing til lage program were intermedi ate (114 bushels/acre). The researchers attributed most of the yield differences to inconsistent weed control with the spring-applied treatments and an increased potential for soil moisture depletion with the spring-applied herbicide. Residue cover at planting was greatest for the spring kill system at 72 percent. The fall kill system had a lower, but still acceptable, S 3 percent residue coverage under these conditions. Potential disadvantages of the fall kill no-till system include the need to decide on fields to rotate in the fall and giving up the potential for mak ing a late harvest. Beside the yield advantages found in this study, the fall kill system here in Pennsylvania has been a very effective way to control the perennial weeds and often results in an excellent seedbed in the spring. JLI fi Pa. Master Corn Growers Association 201