AiO-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 24, 1998 OPINION Cure “Bellyfulitis” Before Starvation Sets In A new report by a prestigious research committee of the National Academy of Sciences has found that the great majority of naturally occurring and synthetic food chemicals present in the human diet “occur at levels far too low to have any adverse effects ,on health.” Carcinogens and anticarcinogens in the Human Diet, released February IS and produced by 20 of the nation’s leading scientific experts in biochemistry, toxicology, risk assessment, food and nutrition, affirms that a balanced diet rich in fruits and vegetables and low in calories and fat is the best way for consumers to reduce the risk of cancer. Committee chairman Dr. Ronald W. Estabrook, a biochemist from the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, said, “If Americans are concerned about cancer, then they should be concerned about calories and fat.” Noting the public’s concern over chemicals, he also said that “regulation has been very effective at keeping synthetic chemicals at a very low level” in the American diet Jay Vroom, president of the American Crop Protection Asso ciation, said, “This is a victory for common sense and the American consumer, who has suffered needlessly over the years from ‘health-scare’ reports generated by groups opposed to modem, safe agricultural technology." Vroom also pointed out that the Academy’s findings under score what former U.S. Surgeon General Dr. C. Everett Koop has said, that “our food supply is not only the safest, but it is the most abundant in the world, and pesticides are one of the impor tant tools that have made that abundance possible.” From the chemist’s lab to the farmer’s field and onto the American table, the U.S. food safety system protects our entire food supply through rigorous testing and the careful use of mod em agricultural technology. Each Environmental Protection Agency-registered pesticide undergoes at least 120 separate tests designed to determine human health, safety and environ mental effects. On average, only one in 20,000 chemicals ever makes it from the laboratory through testing and EPA legisla tion to the farmer’s field. Pesticide development, testing and EPA registration take eight to 10 years to complete and costs manufacturers $5O million or more per crop protection product. The irony of all this discussion is that life expectancy con tinues to lengthen for Americans. The number of people who live past 100 years has dramatically increased. Actually, the problem with the food supply from American farmers is not that it is full of chemicals. The problem with the food supply is that it is so abundant. This abundant food supply causes “bellyfulitis,” a disease expressed by complaints through a full mouth by someone who has never faced food rationing. We can only hope that this American disease is cured in the opponents of agriculture before starvation sets in. Association annual meeting. General Pickett Restaurant, Gettysburg, 6 p.m. Wyoming County Sheep and Wool Growers annual Winter Lamb p.m.-9:30 p.m. DHIA Records Workshop, Adams County extension office, 10 a.m.-2:30 p.m. Frederick County Milkers School, Dan Dee Restaurant, Frederick. Octorara Young Farmers Grain Marketing Meeting, Ag Ed Room. 7:30 am. ter, also March S. Potato Growers meeting, York Extension, Pleasant Acres, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Pesticide update, Penn Manor High School. 7 p.m. Milkers School, Carroll County Md. extension office, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Nutrient Management Public Information meeting, Dauphin County Ag and Natural Resour ces Center, Dauphin, 10 a.m.-noon. Commercial Tree Fruit Growers meeting, Brynwood Inn and Banquet Center, Lewisburg, 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Mastitis and Milking Quality Seminar, Williamson, 9:45 To Participate In Nutrient Management Hearings The State Soil Conservation Commission will be holding hear ings on the proposed nutrient man agement regulations in March. The hearings give people the opportun ity to present testimony on the proposed regulations. Those wishing to give oral testi mony at one of the public hearings must contact Karl Brown. State Conservation Commission, Room 304, Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, 2301 North Cameron St, Harrisburg, PA 17110, (717) 787-8821 at least one week before the hearing. Oral testimony will be limited to 10 minutes for each witness. Also, three written copies of the oral tes timony must be submitted at the hearing. Written comments may also be submitted to the State Conserva tion Commission at the above address before March 29, 1996. The public hearings are scheduled for March 4, Somerset County Vo- Tech; March 5, Mercer County Cooperative Extension Office; March 6. Brynwood Inn, Lewis burg; and March 11, Farm and Home Center, Lancaster. Now is the time to participate in the regulatory process and make your thoughts known. To Check For Termites According to Robert Anderson, extension agronomy agent, you can prevent termite damage to your home if you know when to check for signs, what to look for. and whom to contact for help. March is when you should inspect around your house and buildings. Examine the area where the foundation meets the siding. Check under the porch, in the base ment, and in crawl spaces for signs of termites. What are the signs? Look for telltale mud tubes. Since termites die when exposed to air, they build tubes to pass from the soil where Financial Workshop For Progres sive Pork Producers, Satellite Workshop, York Extension, 8 p.m.-lO p.m. Nutrient Management Law meet ing, Paradise Community Cen- p.m. Cambria County crops meeting, Ebensburg extension office, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. (Turn to Pago All) they live to die building where they feed on wood. These tubes look like long streams of mud about one fourth inch in diameter running up basement walls or along foundations. Examine wood closely. Even if the wood shows no damage, knock on it to see if it is solid. Termites could be inside wood that looks fine on the outside. If you think you may have ter mites, call in a professional pest control service to confirm your findings and to set up a treatment plan. To Select All-American Seed Varieties As you read through the seed catalogs that have arrived in the mail or one of the many gardening magazines available, you may see a new variety of flower or type of vegetable that you have never grown before. o BY LAWRENCE W. ALTHOUSE ‘HI sn A BIT LIKE JESUS February 25,1996 A BIT LIKE JESUS February 25, 1996 Background Scripture: Ruth 2 through 4 Devotional Reading: Ruth 2:14-20 A Mend of ours told us of an in cident that took place some years ago when she was driving from Dallas to Austin. Out on the open highway one of her tires blew out and she had to pull off to the side of the road. Although she knew how to change a tire, she was un able to unscrew any of the lugnuts on the wheel. “Lord, send me someone to help!” she breathed. A number of cars went whizzing by, but soon a dilapidated pickup truck pulled to a stop just in front of hers. Seeing it. she felt a sense of great relief, but when two young men alighted from the car. her heart sank. The word “hippies” flashed in her mind, for they were long-haired and bearded. Her fears, however, proved un founded for the two young men were polite and had her tire changed within minutes. She of fered them a 20-dollar bill in ap preciation, but they refused. As they drove away, they wished her “a safe trip.” “My previous image of hippies had not been very posi tive,” she told us. “What a sur prise, then to find that, while sev eral well-dressed people passed me by, the answer to my prayer came in the form of two bearded hippies who despite their appear ance, weren't anything like what I expected. Actually,” she admitted, “they looked a bit like Jesus.” BEARDS & LONG HAIR In the story of Ruth there is no physical description of either Ruth or Boaz, but in our minds we tend to picture them as attractive peo ple. Ruth, because she was so loy al to Naomi and willing to work hard to provide for the two of them. Boaz, because he was so kind to Ruth for, after all, she was a foreigner, a Moabitess. Whereas needy load women were granted the privilege of gleaning, picking up the leavings left by the harvesters (Leviticus 19:9,10), it was not a kindness granted to for eigners. In fact, as a foreign worn- Your next thought may be. “Will this type of plant grow in my yard?” and “Which variety should I plant?” Dr. Tim Elkner, extension horti cultural agent, says the answer to the first question is to read the vari ety description closely or to con sulta good garden book for further information. He says the answer to the second question is to select an “All-American Selection” if one is available. This signifies that the plant has performed well through out the country in various test locations. All-American Selections are judged by an independent organi zation of volunteers that evaluate new seed selections for growth and productivity. By choosing one of these selections, your chances of having success with a new type of plant are increased. Feather Prof.'s Footnote: "Excellence is an attitude that says good can be better." an gleaning in an Israelite’s grain field, she might very well be mo lested by the laborers. But Boaz bestowed great kind ness upon Ruth even though she was a foreigner. Why? “All that you have done to your mother-in law since the death of your hus band,” said Boaz, “has been fully told me. and how you left your fa ther and mother and your native land and come to a people you did not know before” (2:11). Boaz treated Ruth with kindness be cause he had heard of her great kindness to Naomi, his kinswom an. One did not expect kindness from a foreigner, but Ruth did all and more than any Israelite daugh ter-in-law might have done. So. as Naomi’s being an Israelite did not keep Ruth from being kind to her, so Ruth’s being a Moabitess did not stop Boaz from being kind to her. A CYCLE OF KINDNESS In many cultures today we see between religious and ethnic groups a hostility and vengeance that’s been passed on from one generation to another. The cycle of hatred spirals on and on and it is almost impossible to break the cy cle. But kindness can work the same way. One act of kindness can inspire another kind act and our daily lives can be opportuni ties from keeping those cycles alive and well. When Eugene Debs was impri soned as a conscientious objector, he became interested in a fellow prisoner, an Afro-American who other inmates claimed was incorri gible. Debs started a campaign of kindness toward the black inmate, leaving an orange on the man’s bed and going off without a word. Despite many rebuffs, the two eventually became firm friends. Yean later when he learned that Debs had died, the fellow inmate, now a useful citizen, commented, “He was the only Jesus Christ I ever knew.” How wonderful if someone could say that of us! The Althouses will lead a group to the Holy Land, Oct. 9 to Nov. 2, 1996. Space limited. For informa tion, write them at 4412 Shenan doah Ave., Dallas. TX 75205. Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building lE. Main St Ephrata, PA 17522 —by— Lancaster Panning, Inc. A Stakman Entarprita Hobart GLCampbai Qonaral Manager a —■— o^l4^ SWainilllHMWlßlf UNfMQNIQ EOROr Copyright 1996 by Lancaster Farming