AlO-Lincastef Farming, Saturday, April 16, 1994 OPINION America Diverts To Underdeveloped Nation In an effort that threatens the health and safety of every Ameri can, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has announced a plan that calls for the eventual banning of chlorine. According to the Putting People First March newsletter, EPA Administra tor Carol M. Browner recently unveiled key elements of the Clin ton Administration recommendations to reform the Clean Water Act. The stated intention of the new rule is to reduce water pollution and one of the targeted “contaminants” is chlorine and chlori nated compounds. In the recommendations for reauthorization of the Clean Water Act, the EPA is advised to develop a national strategy for substituting, reducing or prohibiting the use of chlor ine and chlorinated compounds. The objective of those “environ mentalists” behind this move is to ban all uses of chlorine, includ ing chlorination of water and the use of chlorine to disinfect treated sewage. A report this week in the Wall Street Journal said that EPA has acted to speed treatment of sewage that overflows in rains. Its new procedure is aimed at expediting treatment of sewage that flows into rivers, lakes and streams during heavy rains. The plan addresses “combined sewer overflow,” a problem that often occurs during rainstorms when sewer systems connected to stormwater drains overflow and empty into waterways. Although such overflow is illegal under the 1972 Clean Water Act, EPA has been vague about how cities should deal with the problem. According to the report, combined sewers are found in 1,100 communities around the nation. Under the new procedures, EPA will not require “secondary” biological treatment of sewage overflow in treatment plants, provided such overflows occur no more than four times a year and provided cities perform “prim ary” treatment, such as disinfecting the water and removing sol ids on 85 percent of the overflow before it empties into waterways. Two revealing points should be noted from this report. First, with all those towns and cities pouring untreated sewage into the streams and lakes, agriculture is obviously not the only non-point source of contamination in the water environment of our nation. And two, the best way and maybe the only know way to “disin fect” the water from sewage overflow is with chlorine. Countless studies have shown the chlorination of water is one of the major factors in the increase in life expectancy of the US population since the turn of the century. Without chlorination, many diseases, such as cholera, would quickly develop. For those who hold animals sacred, it can be noted that a healthy water supply benefits animals too. To us, the attempted ban on chlorine looks like a move to undermine the major health advantages we have had as Ameri cans because of our advanced knowledge and technology. In addition, to ban chlorine would likely cause the loss of the envi ronment we so much want to save. Hopefully, clear thinking will prevail before America diverts back to the status of an underdeve loped nation. Farm Calendar Income Opportunities For Rural Areas Workshop, Center for Career and Technical Educa tion, Cresaptown, Md. McKcan-Potter Blueberry Produc tion Workshop, Smethport Extension Office, 10 a.m. Blueberry Production Workshop, McKean Extension Office, Penn State Garden Recycling Week, Springettsbury Town ship Park, York, thru April 24. Pa. State Grange Banquet, Shera Lancaster County Bee Producers meeting, Lancaster Friends Meetinghouse, 7 p.m. McKean-Potter pesticide applica tion exam. Potter Extension / l ~ -> / 1 Office, Coudersport, 10 a.m. Carroll County, Md. Extension Workshop On Small-Scale Fruit Production, 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m., concludes April 26. EAYFA Ladies Night, Cloister ent management strategy, ''ualf Ii South Willf ig. State Fairgrounds, Columbus, Ohio. Ohio Spring Dairy Spectacular, Ohio Fairgrounds, Columbus, Conference On Artificial Insemination and Reproduction, Grand Hotel, Milwaukee, Wis., thru April 23. Wool Handling School, Cliff Eng- To Deworm Pasture Heifers According to Glenn Shirk, extension dairy agent, heifers that are plagued with parasites are unthrifty and less profitable. When young heifers are pas tured, the risk of them acquiring internal parasites is great, especial ly if the pastures were grazed by heifers the previous year. To protect these heifers from internal parasites, they should be dewormed about three weeks after the initial grazing. Equally impor tant is a second deworming about three to five weeks after the first deworming. This time interval depends on label instructions of the deworm ing material you are using. Select a product that is effective against adult worms. Consult your veterinarian for additional advice. To Make Safety A Priority In a recent issue of Agricultural Safety and Health News, Dennis Murphy, Penn State agricultural engineer, reminds us of the impor tance of making safety a priority in our farming operations. He encourages us to take time to land Farm, Rising Sun, Md., 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Virginia Beef Expo, Rockingham County Fairground, Harrison burg, .Va., thru April 24. Guernsey Breedefs Association Ohio Spring Spectacular, Col- umbus, Ohio. Penn State Poultry Science Club dinner and awards banquet. Days Inn, State College, 7:30 Clever Cloven 4-H Central NJ. Sheep Demonstration, Concor- de Stud Farm, 10:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Guernsey Breeders Association Pennsylvania Blue Halter Sale, Bedford. Old Time Plow Boys Club Annual Spring Plowing Show, Pa. Ger man Heritage Center,. Kutz- town University, 11 a.m.-5 p.m., thru April 24. Llama and Aplaca Festival, Tol land Agricultural Center, Ver- non, Conn., 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Penn State Dairy Expo, Ag Arena, University Park. Northwest All-Breed Calf Sale, Crawford County Fairgrounds, Meadville, 11:30 a.m. Tractor and Truck Pull, Carroll County Ag Center, Westmin- (Turn to Page A 35) determine what hazards exists on your farm and then correct them. Diseuss safely with family members and anyone else who works on your farm. If you have children or.grandchildren, estab lish rules about where they may and may not play. Also, keep dangerous chemicals and machines beyond their reach. Consider the health and safety aspects of your work habits. Do you use appropriate personal pro tective equipment for dangerous jobs? Do you treat farm machinery with the respect it deserves, or do you place yourself at risk by cut ting comets? Farming remains the nation’s riskiest job. To change this, every farmer needs to place a priority on safety. Never assume that an accident cannot happen to you. Resolve to be aware of farm safety throughout the year and take appropriate actions to protect yourself and your loved ones. BY LAWRENCE W ALEHOUSE m. , „ „ MSILS IS "SACRIFICE" A DIRTY WORD? April 17.1994 Background Scripture Romans 12 Devotional Reading Philippians 2:1-4, 14-16, 4:8,9 There was a time when “sacri fice” was a perfectly good word that was used in polite conversa tion. I can even remember even hearing it in church from time to dme. But not any more. Something has happened to the word in the last several decades. It is not only unfashionable to speak in our so ciety of making sacrifices, but there is something positively ob scene associated with it We live in an age when people are primari ly interested in asserting, affirm ing and fulfilling themselves. The thought of sacrificing one’s self for the sake of someone else seems to have gone out with the double standard in sexual morali ty- When I was a youth, Romans 12:1-3 was one of the most popu lar and frequently used texts at the church camp 1 used to attend: “I appeal to you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God. to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship.” What being a disciple of Jesus Christ was all about, we told each other, was nothing less than offering ourselves as living sacrifices to the Lord. I don’t know how well we lived that ideal, but we believ ed it and thought that that was what our lives should be. ’ ‘ SELF REALIZATION I realize that what has happened in the intervening years is not necessarily bad or wrong. Some people carried the concept of self sacrifice into a morbid preoccupa tion with martyrdom in an age that rarely asked for it or even provid ed an opportunity for it. Self-ac ceptance and self-realization were concepts that needed to become part of our personal and public consciousness. But, as so often happens, we threw the baby out with the bathwater, as the old say ing goes. We have emphasized the self to the exclusion of others and that is not spiritually healthy either. To Keep Cows Eating Properly When cows go off feed and sud denly lose a lot of flesh, they may develop fatty livers. This may further depress appetites, causing drops in milk production and plac ing cows at risk for ketosis. Thus, it is very important to keep cows eating well before and after calving. Be sure their rations are properly balanced for both the dry period and early lactation. Feed high quality feeds that are fresh and palatable. Also, provide easy access to good quality water. Giving cows propylene glycal may also help prevent fatty livers and ketosis. Just as important is minimizing stress on cows by making the transition from dry per iod to early lactation as smooth as possible. Feather Profs Footnote: “Quality is never an accident. It is always the result of high intention, sincere effort, intelligent direc tion, and skillful execution." As in so many areas of life, the key is balance: self and others, not self vs. others. In fact, we can nev er truly fulfill our own selves without learning to give ourselves for the sake of others. When we live only for self, we find we can never fulfill our own potential. In George Bernard Shaw’s play, An drades and the Lion, Lavinia, a young Christian who is slated to die a martyr, says to the Roman captain: “... I have no doubt at all that I must die for something greater than dreams or stories.” “But for what?” asks the Captain. “I don’t know,” Lavinia replies, “If it were for anything small enough to know, it would be too small to die for. 1 think I am going to die for God. Nothing else is real enough to die for.” SELF-SACRIFICE Just as anything other than God is too little to die for, so anything other than God is too little to live for. As Ellen Glasgow says, “Life will yield up its hidden sweetness . . . only when it is being sacrific ed to something more precious than life.” One cannot taste the “hidden sweetness” of life until or unless we are willing to offer our lives for “something more pre cious than life.” Most of us hold back from sa crificing ourselves because we are certain self-sacrifice will diminish us, will take something away from our own fulfillment But in pre senting yourself “as a living sacri fice, holy and acceptable to God,” you do not lose, not ultimately at least You actually gain in the long run, because, like Jesus Christ we teach our highest potential only when we are willing to give our selves for “something more pre cious than life.” Yes. I know the world doesn’t see it that way. But die world is wrong. “Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind ...” (12:2). Self-sacrifice is not a dirty word, but the way to the fulfill ment that society promises, but cannot deliver. Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St Ephrata, PA 17522 by Lancaster Earning, Inc. A SMmm Enliprim Robert G. Campbell General Manager Evers# R. Nawtwanger Managing Editor Copyright IM4 by Lancaster Firming