Aio-Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, July 22, 2000 OPINION Increase Farm Income Corn growers took another step toward higher incomes with the recent announcement by the National Corn Growers Associa tion (NCGA) of a $2.5 million research project to create new, higher valued consumer products for corn fiber or bran. “We’re looking up the value chain for corn products,” says Lee Klein, a farmer from Battle Creek, Neb., and president-elect of NCGA. “This research will create a process that will take corn fiber or bran that’s currently going into the market as low-priced feed that we’re practically giving away and instead convert bran into feedstocks for consumer products such as paint and plastics and into ethanol. And reducing the supply of corn ultimately im proves prices. “It’s another example of NCGA’s stewardship of checkoff dol lars. Growers will get the benefit of the entire project and leverage their investment of checkoff dollars 10 to 1. That’s an enviable return on investment. NCGA will manage the project in a cost sharing partnership with Archer Daniels Midland of Decatur, 111. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is contributing $1.7 mil lion and Battelle Pacific Northwest National Laboratory of Rich land, Wash., will be a subcontractor for this project,” says Klein. This is a milestone on the road to having renewable resources claim 10 percent of the consumer chemical feedstock market by 2020. The 10 percent is the Vision for the Agricultural Industry of the Future program sponsored by DOE. In 1996, the agricultural and chemical industries and the DOE, with leadership from NCGA, developed the Plant/Crop-based Renewable Resources 2020 program to achieve the 10 percent level. This DOE grant is part of the agency’s Bioproducts and Bioenergy Technology pro gram. This is a new effort that develops opportunities in biopro ducts, biopower and biofuels and supplements the Ag Vision program that focuses only on bioproducts. “If plants were the feedstock for 10 percent of the chemical market today, farm income would be more than $5 billion higher,” says Klein. Furthermore, the increased use of renewable resources in chemical feedstocks would decrease oil imports, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and create new industries in the U.S. We know livestock farmers depend on low feed costs to pro duce milk and meat. But we believe there should be enough margin in the food chain to support both higher grain prices and higher milk and meat prices. leen England, Millerton. Cecil County Old Time Farm Days, Fairgrounds, thru July 23. Cecil Co. Fair, Elkton, MD Editor: The movie “Chicken Run” has certainly brought agricul ture and specifically poultry production into the spotlight of the American public. As a poul try industry, we welcome the op portunity to share our advances in consumer food safety, animal welfare, and environmental stewardship. A recent letter to the editor which contained some significant misleading facts and implications about poultry cer tainly warrants a response with some of the real facts on poultry in Pennsylvania. It is fully disingenuous to imply that this poultry is “packed with antibiotics, hor mones, pesticides.” There are no hormones used in poultry pro duction. The author is correct in stat- ♦ Farm Calendar ❖ thru July Jeii^^^iowns^pnrairTtnni etferson July 29. Kimberton Community Fair, ♦ Farm Forum ❖ ing bacteria, specifically Sal monella, can be found on poultry products as well as many other things, including vegetables. As with any raw food product, proper handling plays a big role in keeping the food safe. In fact, every package of raw poultry meat contains a label with proper food handling in structions including washing your hands before and after cooking, don’t cross contami nate, keep the product cold, and cook the product thoroughly. With a few simple food safety practices, poultry remains one of the safest and most nutritious foods in the market. James A. Shirk Assistant Vice-Present of the Poultry Council PennAg Industries Association To Be Aware Of Corn Rootworm Beetles Adult corn rootworm beetles usually begin emerging about July 4th, however, this year they were emerging almost 10 days earlier because of the warm weather, reports Robert Ander son, Lancaster County Exten sion Agronomy Agent. When adult rootworms begin to emerge from the soil, most of the root feeding has been completed. At this time some are adult, most are in the transition pupa stage and only a few are still ac tively feeding larvae. When feeding stops, the corn plant will begin generating new roots above the feeding zone. Within a short period of time, the new roots will almost hide the feed ing damage. If this root growth is sufficient before a storm, it may not cause the corn plant to lodge. Depending on the weather and the extent of root feeding, yields maybe impacted without seeing the damage of lodging corn. To Scout For Corn Rootworm Beetles Scouting now for next year is a way to determine where to spend pesticide dollars to pre vent crop damage next year, ac cording to Robert Anderson, Lancaster County Extension Agronomy Agent. Based on the number of beetles found by the farmer now, a good estimate maybe made if a rootworm in secticide should be applied in that field next year. The thresh old for continuous corn is an av erage of two northern or one western adult beetle per plant. For first year corn in a field, the threshold is an average of three northern or one and half west ern adult beetles per plant. To Prepare For Storms The recent thunderstorms re minds us that high winds, light- thru July 29. Shippensburg Community Fair, thru July 29. Troy Fair, thru July 29. West Central District Dairy Show, Butler County Fair grounds. Prospect. SgHonzons 2000 Confr Holiday Inn, Grantville. Lehigh County Horse Council meeting, Reining, Willow Brook Farms, Catasaqua, 7:30 p.m. Field Crops Day, Northwestern Branch, Custar. Adams County 4-H Swine and Sheep Show and Sale. Penn Allied Nursery Trade Show, Fort Washington Expo Center, thru July 27. Native Plants In the Garden Short Course, Pittsburgh Garden Place, thru July 27. Farm Tour, We Grow With The Seasons, Norbert Kohlmeyer, Hopewell Junction, N.Y., 1 p.m.-3 p.m. (Turn to Pag* A 32) ning and falling trees can cause unpredictable interruptions to electric service. The following precautionary measures will help minimize the inconven ience of an interruption of elec trical service. Keep a battery powered radio, flashlight and plenty of fresh batteries in hand where you can find them in the dark. Avoid the use of candles. Mishandled or unattended can dles could cause a fire at a time when all public safety resources are strained. Keep a radio or light plugged in and turned on so you know when the power is restored. Turn off or disconnect appliances such as air condition ers, computers, heat pumps, WALKING THE WALK July 23,2000 Background Scripture: Ephesians 5 through 6:4. Devotional Reading: Ephesians 5:6-20. Let’s start with the hard part: “Wives be subject to your hus bands as to the Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife as Christ is head of the chur ch...as the church is subject to Christ, so let wives be subject in everything to their husbands” (Eph. 5:21-23). It’s in the Bible then the husband is the head of the wife and wife shall be subject to the husband. Is this an authoritative teaching for all Christians? I do not believe it is. There are other teachings in the Bible that Christians do not count as authoritative. In Levi ticus, Moses, speaking for God, commands the people of God to abstain from certain foods that are “unclean.” (Lev. 11). In Lev iticus 20:10 we are commanded that “If a man commits adultery with the wife of his neighbor, both the adulterer and the adul teress shall be put to death!” In Deuteronomy 2:14 the father and mother of “a stubborn and rebellious son” are commanded to bring the son to the elders at the city gate “and stone him to death with stones.” I do not know of any Chris tians today who obey these com mandments even though they appear unequivocally in the Bible. Though these command ments are represented as the will of God, and although nowhere in the gospels does Jesus revoke them, we do not hold them to be authoritative for us. My own ex perience of Jesus Christ does not permit me to live by these rules. What Is Authoritative? Sometimes we rationalize this problem in holding that the New Testament supersedes the Old. But there are also many Old Testament teachings that we do hold authoritative for us the Ten Commandments, for exam ple. Ference, Furthermore, there are some teachings in the New Testament that we do not regard as authori tative for our lives in Christ. For example: the prohibition against divorce (I Cor. 7:10,11), the stricture against marrying “un believers” (2 Cor. 14), and the acceptance of slavery (Eph. 6:5), among others. Although Paul counseled the Romans to “let every person be subject to the governing authorities” and “he who resists the authorities re sists what God has appointed...” televisions, washers and dryers. If all these appliances begin op erating at the same time after power is restored, your dwell ing’s fuses could blow or circuit breakers could trip. Fill a tub, several large bottles or pots with water. Your water supply could stop if your home uses a well and pump. A fully loaded freezer can keep food cold for 36 to 48 hours if the door remains closed. Remember, touching a vehicle, fence, person or water in contact with a downed line is dangerous. Feather Prof, ’s Footnote: “No one can make you feel inferior without your consent." Eleanor Roosevelt. (Ro. 13:1,2), in the days of the Third Reich, some German Christians resisted the godless Nazi regime as a matter of Christian conscience. My point is not to deny the Bible’s authority, but to honestly acknowledge that no one lives in literal compliance with all the teachings and commandments we find there. All of us interpret the scriptures in accordance with what we believe to be the spirit of Christ. Often we may not agree on what is authorita tive in the Bible. Much as we love and respect it, our loyalty is not to a book, but the Lord whom we encounter within it. So, Paul’s view of the superior role of the husband over the wife simply reflected the male dominated society in which he worked. Because he believed that the triumphal return of Christ was near, he did not at tempt to change the structure of that society. Instead he sought to infuse that structure with a new spirit: “Therefore be imita tors of God, as beloved children. And walk in love, as Christ loved us and gave himself up for u 5...” (Eph. 1:2). Imitating God The teaching in Ephesians is so radical, so revolutionary that it transformed all human rela tionships: husbands, wives, chil dren, slaves and masters. If we imitate God, we find in emulat ing the self-giving love of Jesus that there can ultimately prevail no injustices, no inequalities, and no subjugations. The emphasis is not upon how we talk the faith, but how we walk it “Walk as children of the light (for the fruit of light is found in all that is good and right and true) and try to learn what is pleasing to the Lord” (5:8a,9,10). Walking is following Christ. Walking is witnessing. It is said that one day St. Francis of Assisi invited some of his monastic colleagues to go with him into town to help him preach to the people. Through out the whole excursion he spoke not a word to the people and his disciples were con founded. “But, Master,” they said at last, “you said we would be preaching as we went, but we never spoke to them.” St. Fran cis then explained to them that the way they walked through the town was the preaching the people needed. We can witness with words, but often the witness of the way we walk with Christ is more con vincing. 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. Burgess General Manager Everett R. Newswanger Editor Copyright 2000 by Lancaster Farming