Aio-Uncastef Fanning, Saturday, October 1, 1994 OPINION Food-Related Scare Story Many news stories you read deal with what Sharon Begley, a Newsweek senior writer who specializes in science and the envi ronment, calls “the cancer-of-the-weck syndrome.” What Ms. Begley means is that on a tegular basis, scare stories are pub lished that blame chemicals, mostly pesticides, for causing cancer. These man-made chemicals are only a small part of the chemi cals we eat each day. Natural chemicals found in vegetables, for example, have many more carcinogens than any small amount of artifical chemical residue that may still remain on the plant when we eat it. A cup of coffee has more natural pesticides than any kind of tossed salad you can imagine. We live longer, on the average, than people of past genera tions, largely because science has conquered many of the fatal diseases. People enjoy being scared. That’s why they go to the movies. But at home, when they pick up the daily newspaper, we think they should be comforted to know that our farmers produce the safest food supply in the world at a cost that is incredibly low, often below the cost of production. And if they really want to be scared, they should think about what it would be like if the grocery store shelves were suddenly bare. Now that’s what we would call a food-related scare story. Farm Calendar Heritage Festival, Berks County Heritage Center, near Reading Airport, thru OcL 2. Blacksmith Days, Carroll County Md. Farm Museum, thru Oct 2. ~ . . . lIIWII ■ - ~ Suiukn. Oclolht 2 National 4-11 Week National 4-H Week, thru Oct. 8. 47th Joint Annual Conference of the State Conservation Com mission and the Pennsylvania Association of Conservation Districts, Westmoreland Coun- Hollidaysburg, thru Oct 6. Manheim Community Farm Farm, Pleasant Mount 10:30 iiry xpo, Uiiiiv Expo Center, Madison, Wis., thru Oct 9. 38th Annual Keystone Livestock Expo, Farm Show Complex, ence, Bradford County exten Monday October 10 < olumhus D.i\ Poultry Management and Health Seminar, Kreider’s Restaurant, Manheim, noon. Pcnn/Jersey Estate Planning Workshop, Holiday Inn, Beth lehem, 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m. 0JK 1 lucsdin, October II Delmarva Poultry Industry annual meeting, Delmarva Convention Center, Delmar, Md. Dairylea Cooperative Inc. annual meeting, Sheraton Inn, Liver pool, N.Y., thru Oct. 12. Juniata County Conservation Field Day, Art Zug Farm, Thompson town^Murf^un^^^^^ Pa. Council of Cooperatives annu al meeting, Penn State Scanti con Conference Center Hotel. State College, thru Oct. 13. Virginia/Pennsylvania Turkey Days, Sheraton Inn, Harrison burg, Va. Veterinary Nutrition Forum, Days Inn, Lancaster, 7 p.m. Expanding Pa. Products Seminar, Wildwood Conference Center, Harrisburg Area Community 4-H N.E. Regional Leaders For um, Durham, N.H., thru Oct 16. Adams County Holstein Associa tion annual meeting, 7 p.m. Lancaster County Pasture Walk, Roman Stoltzfoos Farm, Kin zers, 10:30 a.m. Bedford County Farm Field Day, Gatesway Farms, New Enter- Saturday Oclobei 15 Sunda\, October l(> Mond.u, Oclobei 17 ( olumbus I).iv New Fanning Traditions Work shop, WMREC, Keedysville, Dillsburg Community Fair, Dills burg, thru OcL 22. Lancaster County Bee Association Fall Honey Beeswax and Cook ing Roundup, Dutch Gold Hon PAS A Nutrient Management Field To Enter Grain Bins Safely Grain farmers who store their own grain are at risk of suffocation in grain bins. Moving grain is especially dangerous. Flowing grain works in the same way as quicksand, pull ing anyone in the bin down and under in less than one minute with very little ability to free themselves. Following a few safety rules while working around a grain bin may help protect your life. If you must enter a grain bin, always stay above the stored material on a cat walk. Never enter a bin to break a bridge or to dislodge caked mater ial from the side of a bin. Use a wooden or plastic pole to break material free. Do not use a metal pole, which might come in contact with electric lines. Never enter a bin while it is being unloaded. Have controls which run loading and unloading equipment locked off anytime someone is in the bin to avoid someone from starting the equipment Run ventilating equipment before entering and while in the bin. Wear a safety belt or harness that is equipped with a lifeline that will keep you above the stored grain if you fall. Always have someone standing by outside the bin anytime you enter the storage. To Precondition Beef Calves Chester Hughes, extension livestock agent, reminds us the purpose of preconditioning or pre vaccinating beef calves is to help alleviate the stress at weaning, shipment, and adjustment to a fcedlot environment. This also helps builds resistance against Day, Randy and Karen Hunts man Dairy, Martinsburg, 10 a.m.-3:30 p.m. National Meeting On Poultry Health and Processing. Shera ton Ocean Qty,“Ocean City, Md., thru Ocl 21. Uniontown Poultry and Farm Show, Uniontown, thru Oct. 23. Workshop Series On Computer ized Farm and Record Keeping, Lancater Farm and Home Cen- ter, 10 a.m.-12 p.m. and 1 p.m.-3 p.m., also Oct. 27. Pasture Walk, Dr. Robert and Helene Dreisbach, Hamburg, 10:30 a.m.-noon. Conservation Easement Admini strator's Workshop, Penn State Extension, Carlisle, 9 a.m.-4 o.m. some of the causes of disease that result from stress, especially respiratory diseases. Preconditioning also implies the calves are castrated, implanted, dehorned, weaned and started on feed at least three weeks prior to sale or shipment. All weaned beef calves should be dehorned and bull calves castrated well before weaning. Also, two rounds of vaccina tions should be administered, including IBR, BVD, PI3, BRSV, H, Somnus, Pasturella, and a seven-way clostridal. Depending on your program, you may include implants and wormers. If you have any ques tions, consult your veterinarian. To Plant Winter Cover Crops Winter cover crops play a very important role in nutrient manage ment. Many farmers need to empty their manure storage units during the fall season. This means these crop nutrients are applied to crop land at a time of year when they are WORSHIPPING THE GODS OF OUR ENEMIES October 2,1994 Background Scripture: Judges 2:6 through 3:6 Devotional Reading: Psalms 81:6-16 The late Harry Emerson Fos dick of the Riverside Church in New York City was one of my preaching idols as a young minis ter. I was privileged to hear him on one or two occasions and read most or all of his books. One of his sermons that intrigued me was entitled, if I remember correctly, “Worship ping The gods of Our Enemies.” I don’t recall the text upon which the sermon was based, but I rather imagine it was from the book of Judges—most likely the second chapter of Judges, which is a kind of summary of the whole book: the people of Israel forsake God and worship the gods of their neighbors: upon them and they cry to God for help; he sends someone to extri cate them, and then, freed of their disaster, they return to following other gods. Chapter after chapter, this is the story of the Book of Judges. Although we may have diffi culty in understanding how the Israelites could have been so stu pid and fickle, very often the story of the Israelites is our story, too, and the message of this ancient book is a message to us as well as to them. Have we not from time to time fallen down to worship the gods of our enemies, too? For approximately 80 percent of my life the world has beenthe stage for a gigantic struggle between democracy and commu nism. Within the last few years it has appeared that the battle is over—although I'm not entirely certain about that. During that long struggle the enemy was usu ally characterized as “materialis tic communism,” a legitimate appellation, I think, because, as an ideology, communism was based upon that idea that well being is dependent upon our access to material goods, requir ing essentially a redistribution of not needed by a growing crop. •Therefore these nutrients are vul nerable to being lost to the envi ronment because of soil erosion and leaching. Winter cover crops are a valu able tool fanners may use to pre vent tconomic loss of valuable nutrients and prevent environmen tal damage. By planting a small grain crop such as rye. it will take up the available nitrogen and hold it in the plant preventing loss to the water supply. If the rye is harvested, the nutrients will be utilized as high quality feed. If the rye is killed or plowed under next spring, the nutrients will become available to the following crop. The rye will also prevent nutri ent loss by slowing soil erosion. Rye may be planted as late as November, but the earlier it is planted the more nutrients it will take up and the more it will yield next spring. Feather Profs Footnote: "The loftier your goals, the higher your risk, the greater your accomplishments." wealth. The collapse of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union would seem to indicate that communistic materialism has failed miserably on an interna tional scale. So, is that the end of materialism? No, hardly, for it seems to be the one factor that permeates the lives of people around the globe, including, and probably especially, our own society here in the USA. Accord ing to our current culture, the answer to our deepest needs and problems is to be found in the material things we are able to acquire, materialism tells us who is successful and what is impor tant in the home, the school, the marketplace, and, yes, even in the churches. The values that propel our society today are largely eco nomic, not spiritual or even moral. GODLESS COMMUNISM Our old enemy was also labeled as “Godless commu nism,” another tag that was, for the most part, accurate. Religion was permitted behind the Iron Curtain, so long as it was kept private arid did not attempt to affect that communist society. But, if communist society was “godless”—and it was —is ours by contrast necessarily “Godful”? I think not. Prophetic voices in our society are told to keep their religious views private. National issues are decided, not on the basis of what we may think God wills, but on the basis of political ideology. The two labels which tran scend all other considerations today are “liberal” and “conserv ative.” If people think something is “liberal” in its inception, they rarely ask what God thinks of it. If something bears the label “con servative,” it may be rejected, not because of its worth, but because of that label. Political ideology plays a much more important role in our society than spirituality. These may be just two of the ways in which our society wor ships at the altars of our old ene mies. Can you think of any more? Lancaster Fanning Established 19SS Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St. Ephrata, PA 17522 by Lancaster Farming, Inc. A SMiman Entvprtm Robert Q. Campbell General Manager Evaieo R. Newiwtnger Managing Edtor Copyright I*o4 by Uneaatar Farming