AIQ-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 19, 2000 OPINION Fear Becomes Fact Now that we have reduced the risk of environmental contamination from pesticides in our cornfields with biotechnology, you would think all would be well on the farm front. Not so. Now farmers are getting a new set of federal governmental regulations because geneti cally modified corn killed monarch butterfly caterpil lars in a lab experiment. Known as Bt corn, it carries a gene from a bacter ium, which produces a toxin that kills pests that eat the corn plants. Because of public fear, farmers are now to plant traditional corn around the edges of Bt cornfields and plant 20 percent of their corn as non-Bt com. We know of one farmer who had an extreme prob lem with corn stalk borer until he started to use Bt corn. Now he will need to go back to his old problem. In addition, the seed companies in the last several years have put forth their best effort for increased yields into the Bt varieties. Farmers have seen better resistance to high winds and a yield of eight to 10 bush els per acre more than traditional corn. But a perceived fact, even one that is generated by fear, becomes a fact that must be recognized. The fact: farmers will now need to go back to non-Bt corn varie ties for at least part of their crop. Western Pa. Gardening and Landscaping Symposium, Pittsburgh Zoo, Pittsburgh, 8 a.m.-3:45 p.m. Beginning Beekeeping Seminar, Beaver County Cooperative Extension, Beaver, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 2000 Sorghum Industry Confer ence, Omni Bayfront Hotel, Corpus Christi, Texas, thru Feb. 22. Pa. Game Breeders and Hunting Preserves Meeting, Nittany Lion Inn, University Park, thru Feb. 22. Adams County Fruit Growers’ Meeting, Biglerville High School. Dairy Disease and Biosecurity Practice, Hoss’s Steak and Sea House, Elizabethtown, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Bradford County Dairy Day, SRU Middle School, East Smithfield, 9:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Solanco Young Farmer Dairy Herd Health and Manage ment, Solanco High School, 7:30 p.m. Capitol Region Advanced Crop Weed Management School, Lebanon Valley Ag Center, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Lykens Valley Dairy Day, Gratz. Schuylkill County Regional Vegetable Meeting, Schuylkill County Ag Center, Pottsville, 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Dairy Disease and Biosecurity Practices, Washington Inn, Boyertown, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Pesticide Update Six-Pack, Blair County Extension, Al toona, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Advanced Crop Weed Manage ment School, Lebanon Valley Ag Center, Lebanon. Regional Beef Producers Meet ing, Otterbein United Meth odist Church, Sunbury, 7 p.m. Lancaster DHIA PC Dart Workshop, Kreiders Restau rant, Manheim, 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Mid-Atlantic Direct Marketing Conference 2000, Parsippany Hilton, Parsippany, N.J., thru Feb. 27. Capitol Region Introductory Crop Weed Management School, Franklin County Co operative Extension, 9 a.m.- 3:30 p.m. Farm Financial Health Checkup, Cochranville Com munity Center. Southeast Pa. Vegetable Growers’ Day, Family Heri tage Restaurant, Franconia. Dairy Disease and Biosecurity Practices, Sunny Crest Home, Inc., Morgantown, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. York/Lancaster County Tree Fruit Growers’ Educational Meeting, Lancaster Farm and Home Center, 8:15 a.m. Northeast Region Landscape Seminar, Holiday Inn, Bar tonsville, 8:45 a.m.-4 p.m. Managing Weeds in Field Crops, 4-H Center, Creamery. New York State Farm Show, Syracuse, thru Feb. 26. Ag Outlook Forum, Crystal Gateway Marriott Hotel, Arl ington, Va., thru Feb. 25. Mid-Atlantic No-Till Confer ence, Four Points Hotel, Hagerstown, Md., continues Feb. 25 at the Holiday Inn, Grantville, Pa. Berks County Vegetable Growers’ Meeting, Kutztown. York Garden and Flower Show, York Expo Center, thru Feb. 27. Centre County Cooperative Ex tension meeting, Logan Grange Hall, Pleasant Gap, 7 p.m. Dairy Disease and Biosecurity Practice, Russellville Grange To Look At Land Rent When renting land, the income potential of the land is a critical consideration when determining rental rate. To determine this the renter needs to know the production capability of the land, the value of the product at market time and the cost to produce the crop. For example, the soil will produce 165 bushels of corn, 51 bushels of soybeans and 4 tons of alfalfa hay per year m a 3 year crop rotation. The value of corn is $2.35 per bushel, soybeans is $5.75 per bushel and alfalfa hay is $llO per ton. The gross income is $387.50 (165 x $2 35) for corn, $293.25 for soybeans and $440 for alfalfa hay for an average income of $373.59 per acre. With production costs of $230.13 per acre for corn, $145.85 per acre for soybeans and $276.88 per acre for alfalfa hay or an average cost of $217.65. This leaves an average net income per acre of $155.94. The farmer then needs to deduct the value of his time and management and the balance is the maximum amount that may be paid for land rent. A poultry, dairy or livestock operation may be willing to subsidize the land rental rate from the animal enterprise in order to have the necessary land for proper manure utilization. To Check Us Out On The Web As technology continues to permeate into our daily lives, we are presented with an ever increasing access to information, goods and services, thanks to the internet. We invite you to join us on the net and bookmark your favorite pages. To start with, here are addresses to some of Penn State's web pages: Penn Statewww.psu.edu, College of Agricultural Sciences www.cas.psu.edu Lancaster County Cooperative Extension lancaster extension.psu.edu College of Agricultural Sciences Publications www.cas.psu.edu/news.htm Dairy and Animal Sciences www.das.psu.edu Dairy Outlook and Market Update www.aers.psu.edu/DairyOutlo Dairy Cattle Nutrition www.das.psu.edu/dcn Drought Related Information www.cas.psu.edu/docs/issues/ drought PENpages www.penpagespsu.edu Hall, Oxford, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. 2nd Annual Altoona Tree, Shrub, and Turf Conference, Altoona. Crop Master’s Farming After fTurn to Page A3l) Veterinary Science www.vetsci.cas.psu.edu Agronomy www■agronomy.psu.edu Poultry poultry.cas.psu.edu To Practice Child Safety Thousands of children are injured and hundreds killed each year by hazards found on the farm. Some of these children were working on the farm, while others wander into trouble on their own. Implement injury prevention strategies to protect agriculture's greatest resource - the children. Design a fenced safe play area near the house away from work activities. Do not allow children to roam freely on the farm. Inspect your farm regularly for hazards that can injure children. ESCAPING THE CROSS February 20,2000 Background Scripture: Matthew 27:32-61 Devotional Reading: John 19:16-30. Mean-spirited though it was, the challenge the spectators hurled at Jesus on the cross would seem to be a valid one: “You who would destroy the temple and build it in three days, save yourself! If you are the Son of God, come down from the cross!” (Mt. 25:40). They did not expect that Jesus would be able to meet this chal lenge, for the Son of God does not belong on a cross. Therefore, a person hanging on a cross cannot be the Son of God, for he would have the power to call down from heaven legions of angels to overcome the military might of even Rome. As they saw it, these agoniz ing hours on the cross com pletely nullified any legitimate claims he might have made. His helplessness at the hands of the secular rulers meant that he never had the power that had been ascribed to him. “He saved others; he cannot save himself; he is the King of Israel; let him come down now from the cross, and we will believe in him” (25:42). This is a taunt, not an offer; they are not offering to follow him if he can descend from the cross. They believe he cannot “save himself’ and therefore that he never really “saved others.” It was a trick, an illusion-virtually what we would say if Jesus came working his miracles in our midst today. Was God Not Able? So, if not to free himself of this terrible ordeal, why, if Jesus was the Messiah, the Son of God, did he not save himself in order to prove to these scoffers that he was God’s appointed Son? What a demonstration of the power of God and the valid ity of Jesus of Nazareth if God had delivered him from the cross. Did Jesus not want to be saved from this terrible death? Was God not able to save him? Actually, the gospels lead us to believe that there was nothing inevitable about the cross. He had numerous alternatives to Golgotha. He could have avoided coming to Jerusalem. What was there in his mission that determined that he had to go there? Wouldn’t it have been better to build up support in Galilee before risking a clash in Jerusalem? Having come there, Equip all bams, farm shop, chemical storage area, livestock pens, etc. with latches that can be locked or secured so children cannot enter. Children who are physically able to perform farm work should be only assigned age appropriate tasks that they are fully trained to do. They should only perform these tasks under close adult supervision. Do not expose children to hazards. Never carry them on tractors and equipment or invite them into the farm shop, livestock barn, grain bins, etc. Science Feather Prof, 's Footnote: "Without change there can be no breakthroughs. Without breakthroughs there can be no future." he also could have left when the conflict with the authorities began to heat up. Or he could have answered their probing questions a little more judi ciously than he did. If he had to be in Jerusalem, why not keep a lower profile? Did he have to make that Palm Sunday procession and drive the moneychangers out of the temple (they were probably back at their old places a few days later). If he knew that Judas’s loyalty was suspect, shouldn’t he have avoided the Garden of Gethsemane? Even at the last moment, why didn’t he answer Pilate in a way which might have persuaded the Roman gov ernor to find him innocent and release him? Actually, he had an opportunity to do so because the charges against him could have been demonstrated to be false, at the most the product of misun derstanding. Who Drove The Nails? These and similar questions lead some people to conclude that Jesus and the Father wanted the cross in order to ful fill prophecy and a grand plan of salvation. I submit to you, how ever, that the cross was attribu table solely to human sin, not the will of God. Those were men who nailed Jesus to the cross, not angels. You see, the question was never whether God was able to save Jesus from the cross, but did these people have the free will to perpetrate this terrible crime? And, if they did have that free will, would God’s pur pose be better served by saving him from death by crucifixion or by letting men do their worst and giving God the opportunity to show once and for all that the best of God is more powerful than the worst of men? Jesus was actually confronted with two choices: remaining faithful to his mission and ac cepting a cross if it mean that, or seizing the opportunity to escape the cross and failing the Father. Jesus chose not to fail the Father and so he accepted the cross. So, Jesus does not expect that we will seek crosses, but that neither will we shirk them when the purpose of God is at stake. Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St. Ephrata, PA 17522 —by— Lancaster Farming, Inc. A Stemman Enterprise William J. Burges* General Manager Everett R. Newswanger Editor Copyright 2000 by Lancaster Fanning