AlO-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 11, 1994 OPINION Butter Is Better Now it can be said. Butter is better. Not that we haven’t been saying this for years. But then, nobody would listen. The only claim to fame margarine had over butter was the fact that it is made from polyunsaturated fat, which tends to reduce blood cholesterol levels. But now new research shows that trans fatty acids found in margarine raise blood cholesterol. It’s hard not to say, “We told you so.” In a commentary published last Monday by the American Journal of Public Health, Harvard University’s Dr. Waller Wil lett, chief of nutrition, said trans fatty acids are probably worse than saturated fat. While some researchers would like to see more studies done, Michael Jacobson, director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, says showing that trans fatty acids are harmful is indictment enough. The Center is currently peti tioning the FDA to add trans fatly acids to food labels. Another article by Dr. George V. Mann published in the May issue of the British journal lancet hypothesizes that trans fatly acids can reduce the liver’s ability to remove LDL (bad choles terol) from the bloodstream. The author predicts that if trans fat ly acid intake were reduced below 10 grams per day. high blood cholesterol would disappear, and cardiovascular disease would gradually decrease. Margaret Pettingell, director of nutrition education for the American Dairy Association and Dairy Council, Inc., says con sumers have been brainwashed into thinking margarine is healthy. “When it comes to the butter-margarine scorecard, most consumers don’t realize that the two contain the same amount of fat and calories per serving.” In addition, the gap between prices for the two has decreased considerably over the past few years. As retailers frequently fea ture butter as a sale item to draw in consumers, the price gap is further reduced. So now wc say it again. Butler is belter. Just imagine dipping a hunk of freshly steamed lobster or lopping a piping hot ear of com with anything other than the sweet flavor of butter. And in baking, experts agree, nothing is belter than butler. Rose Levy Bercnbaum, award winning author of several cook books and a syndicated columnist for the L.A. Times, says but ler not only enhances the flavor of other ingredients, it also con tributes to (he tender texture of baked goods, as well as impro ving their keeping quality Here’s the way we sec it. All foods can be pan of a healthy daily diet if consumed in moderation. People want to enjoy the food they cat, and now that science has caught up with good sense, people will not need to use bland-lasting substitutes often touted as healthful alternatives. When it comes to topping an English Muffin, vegetables, or baked potato, you arc now backed by research when you choose the one with belter taste. Butter! Farm Calendar Columbia-Luzerne Holstein picnic. Clinton County Herb and Craft Festival, Clinton County Fair grounds, Mackeyville, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Warburton Farms Open House, Poultry Management and Health Seminar, Kreidcr’s Restaurant, ...icrrccyi Jg prog ram, Mason Dixon Farms, Get tysburg, also July 12, Aug. 10, and Sept. 7. Pa. FFA Slate Activities Week, Penn State, thru June 15. Mercer County Wool Growers Wool Pool, Stoneboro Fair- grounds, Stoncboro, 7 a.m.-2 Cumberland Wool Growers Wool I Pool, Carlisle Fairgrounds, Pesticide container recycling prog ram, Cumberland Valley Co- Op, Shippcnsburg, also July 21, Aug. 18, and Oct. 13. Lancastcr/York County Fruit Grower meeting, A.L. Kauff man & Sons Co., Ronks, 6:30 Dclmarva Chicken Festival and Cooking Contest, Delaware Slate U., Dover, Del., thru June 18. Eastern Regional Shorthorn Show and Judging Contest, Howard County Fairgrounds, thru June 18. Franklin County Dairy Princess Pageant, Lighthouse Restaur ant, Chambersburg, 7 p.m. Lancaster County pesticide con tainer recycling, Henry Hoover, Ephrata, also July IS, Aug. 16, and Nov. 2. Sullivan County Dairy Pageant and Parade, Dushore. 7 p.m. To Control Flies This year has been a banner year for flies. With the limited time for spreading manure this year, 1 believe we had more opportunity for flies to hatch in fields over a very short period of time. As a result, more flies have found more homes to land on. Also, we have a lot more new homes being built in the country next to fields where manure is being applied. This increases the number of people being affected by flies. Before spreading manure, make sure as many fly larvae are killed as possible. This may mean spray ing the manure before spreading. If you have the time, you may want to pile the manure together and cover with a trap or black plastic for several days. Either the ammo nia or lack of oxygen will effec tively kill fly larvae. Control flies in confinement houses and bams. If you use spray s, be sure to rotate your chemicals between the different classes, that is, organophosphates, carbamates, and pyrethroids. Do not use one family of pesticide for more than two weeks. Finally, practice good sanita tion. Control water leaks, clean up spilled Teed, properly dispose of dead birds and broken eggs, and keep grass mowed around buildings. To Practice Best Management Today’s consumers are demanding higher quality pro ducts. From cars to appliances to foods, people want the best. Many companies are requiring their suppliers to certify that pro- Sund.n, .luiu' l'l llapin l ather's l)a\! Northeast Conference On Avian PcnnAg Industries Annual Grain Meeting, Eden Resort Inn, Lan caster, 6 p.m. Pa. Rivers Conference, Harrisburg Hilton, thru June 22. 4-H Ambassador Conference, University Park, thru June 22. Five-County 4-H Camp, Camp Blue Diamond, Petersburg, thru June 23. Lancaster County pesticide con tainer recycling, G&G Feed and Supply, Manhcim, also July 18, Schnecksville, thru June 25. Lancaster County pesticide con tainer recycling, Adams Coun ty Nursery, also July 19, Aug. 19, and Oct. 11. (Turn to Pago A3O) ducts are produced under a moni tored quality control program. Tills is beginning to happen with Tood products. This fall, McDo nalds, one of the largest buyers of beef and eggs, will be requiring all suppliers to certify their products were produced in a humane way. Quality control programs are being developed by many agricul tural commodity groups. In order to survive, farmers will need to adopt these programs. These prog rams insure all the small details are done regularly and correctly. This will insure safe and high quality products. These industry standards will need to be followed or the product will not be able to be sold. These best management practices include rodent control, testing, record keeping, clean and sanitary condi tions, and equipment maintenance. Management will become a more important aspect of farming. Now is the time to develop the management skills to keep your T~T ■«—» BY tAWfUNCE W ALEHOUSE njasiLS THE RIGHT STUFF June 12,1994 THE RIGHT STUFF Background Scripture: Exodus 3:1 - 4:17 Devotional Reading: Exodus 3:16 Some years ago, Tom Wolfe wrote a best-selling book, The Right Stuff, about the early years of the American space program and the test pilots and astronauts who had “the right stuff* to make it work. The book, and later the 1983 motion picture, gave us a glimpse into the careful screening that enabled the space agency to choose the right men and ulti mately women, too for these critical tasks. But painstakingly careful selec tion is not always successful. Sometimes, no matter how much potential people may seem to have, they turn out not to have been the right people for the job. Intelligence, education, experi ence. aptitude do not guarantee that someone will have die “right stuff’ for a particular job. I have seen more than a few highly quali fied persons fail and also witness ed the success of people who didn’t appear to have the “right stuff.” Often, wc arc also wrong when we judge our own competence for doing a job, particularly a job that God wants us to do. In concluding that we are not the right person for the job helping another person, working against injustice, speak ing out for a righteous cause, heading up a project reason is usually on our side. We don’t have the experience, the education, or the personality that seems to be re quired. MOSES’ INADEQUACY This was the response of Moses at the burning bush experience when God said to him, “Come, I will send you to Pharaoh that you may bring forth my people... out of Egypt” (3:10). Up to that point, it must have been a fascinating ex perience; a bush that burned but was "not consumed," a heavenly voice speaking from it, the discov ery that this was the God of Abra ham, Isaac and Jacob, the Lord’s farm productive and competitive in the 21st Century. To Tell The Story Farmers Recycle Farmers do recycle. For decades, they have been feeding by-products and food waste. Examples include soybean oil meal, distillers grains, bakery waste, cannery waste, cottonseed, candy, etc. More recently, newspapers and phone books have been ending up under cows as bedding. Some far mers are receiving leaves and app lying them to fields or using them as a source of carbon for composting. These are examples of how far mers are working with communi ties to solve waste disposal prob lems. We need to remind people of the importance of farms in helping to maintain a healthy environment. Feather Prof s Footnote: "When you are out of quality, you are out of business." assurance that he has “seen the af fliction of my people who are in Egypt” and the promise that “I have come down to deliver them out.. . and to bring them out of that land to a good and broad land .. . flowing with milk and honey . . (1;7,B). But then the Lord added. “Come, I will send you to Pharaoh .. and Moses had a reality at tack. Suddenly he was consumed with logic: “Who am I that I should go to Pharaoh, and bring the sons of Israel out of Egypt?” (1:10). Let’s be fair, Moses was right Logically he was the wrong choice for this job: the people of Israel would not accept him be cause of his Egyptian background and he was a fugitive from the Pharaoh’s law. Clearly, he did not have “the right stuff.” GOD’S ADEQUACY Moses was both right and wrong. His objection was a good one, as far as it went But, if he didn’t have “the right stuff, God did. “But I will be with you,” God assures him (1:12). Moses was right, he was not adequate, but God was. “And this shall be a sign for you, that I have sent y0u...” The most important factor here is not Moses’ inadequacy, but that God is sending him. Moses, like any rational person, raised three more objections. First, if he goes to the Israelites in God’s name and they ask who this God is, “what shall I say to them?” Second, they will not believe that God has sent him. And third, “Oh, my Lord, 1 am not eloquent ... but I am slow of speech and longue” three excellent reasons why Moses should insist that God has the wrong person for this task. Yet,. God meets each of these inadequacies with his even more powerful adequacy. He will pro vide Moses with the power and the words he needs so that his purpose will be accomplished through Moses. Thus, Moses, the inexperi enced, inadequate, unprepared runaway convict will have “the right stuff.” And we will too. Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St Ephrata, PA 17522 by Lancaster Farming, Inc. A SMhmin BUmprim Robert G. Campbell General Manager Evans a Nammwnger Menacing Edtor Copyright ISS4 by UneaMer Farming