AlO-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 30. 2000 OPINION Biotech Supports Agriculture The news hit the national wire services this week. The govern ment is investigating whether some taco shells produced in Mexico from corn meal purchased from a Texas mill, which got the corn from farmers in five states, may contain a variety of biotech corn that isn’t approved by the FDA for human consumption. Tests by an antibiotech environmental group were reported to find traces of the corn in taco shells purchased in suburban Washington. This va riety of corn is the only biotech crop that isn’t approved for human consumption because a scientific panel that advises EPA was unable to decide this summer whether the protein in the corn should be al lowed in food. So, this variety of corn should not be grown to be placed in human food and farmers should not put it where it might get there. Consumers have the right to know the food farmers produce is of the best quality. On the other hand, biotechnology can improve the nutritional quality and the quantity of our food supply. Used under the proper restrictions, biotech food contains greater vitamin con tent, removes compounds that cause allergic reactions, and produc es meat, milk, and eggs with healthier qualities. The world’s population will likely increase from six billion today to nine billion by 2050. Biotechnology can play an important role in alleviating hunger and malnutrition by making it possible to grow more food with added nutrition, on the same or less land while also sustaining the land’s ability to support continued farming. Composnngvvm and Home Center, Lancaster, 9 a.m.-10;30 a.m., also Oct. 7 and Oct. 21. 21st Annual Falmouth Goat Race, Falmouth, 10 a.m. Mason-Dixon Fall Harvest Fes tival, Mason-Dixon Fair Week, thruCJ^T national 4-h eekTtHruOct. , Open Youth Schooling Horse Show, Northampton County 4-H Center, Nazareth, 10 a.m. Solanco Young Farmers Family Picnic, Rick Brennaman Farm. East Central Pennsylvania Two- Cylinder Club 6th Annual Fall John Deere Antique Tractor and Implement Show, tractor pulls, St. Peter’s Church, Macungie, 9 a.m. Lebanon Valley Chamber of Commerce Farm-City Tours, 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Homo; ;br ~ Community Fa*' lurg laysl PaTTmailFariTiMarket Associ- ation “Are You Crazy?” Bus Trip, Columbia County. Pasture Meeting, John and Dan Ferko Farm, Central City, 1 p.m. eystone .nternationa. live stock Expo, Farm Show Com plex, Harrisburg, thru Oct. 9 World Dairy Expo, Dane County Expo Center, Madi son, Wis., thru Oct. 8. Getting Started In Farming Seminar, Howard County, Maryland Extension Office, 7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m., also Oct. 11,18, and 25. New Holland Farmers’ Fair, thru Oct. 7. Pasture Walk, Sal Nicosia, Spring Mills, 10 a.m.- 2 p.m. Selling At Roadside Markets Meeting, Seigworth’s Farm Market, Brookville, 6 p.m. Wildlife Management Confer- ♦ Farm Calendar ♦ ence, Nittany Lion Inn, Uni versity Park, thru Oct. 8. Mercer County Soybean Field Day, Struthers Farm, Mercer, 1 p.m. Wyoming County Sheep and Wool Producers Annual Meeting and Roast Lamb Banquet, United Methodist Church, Centermoreland, SoutnJerseyFlowerGrowers Association 12th Annual Fall Trade Show, Salem County Fairgrounds, Woodstown, N.J. Hereford Breeders Classic Sale, Gettysburg. Commercial Scale Chestnut Production Field Day, Del marvelous Chestnuts, Nancy and Gary Petitt Orchard, Townsend, Del., 3 p.m.-dusk. National Apple Harvest Festi val, South Mountain Fair grounds, Arendtsville, also Oct. Sand 14-15. air, Poultry Health ment Seminar, Kreider Res taurant, Manheim, noon. Manheim Community Farm SlhoWjthruOct^jT^^^^^ Dairylea Cooperative Annual Meeting, Holiday Inn, Liver- IjoohN^Y^thmOctJML^^^ Grazing Series For Bankers, and Accountants, Hotel Saxonburg, 9:30 a.m.-3 SStßL^TPaTNan^^fH^ - ti .nnual t’a. .ationai lorse Show, Farm Show Complex, Harrisburg, thru Oct. 21. Unionville Community Fair, thru Oct. 14. Grazing Series For Ag Lenders, Bankers, and Accountants, New Franklin Volunteer Fire Company, New Franklin, 9:30 a.m.-3 p.m. (Turn to Page A 46) To Increase Farm Income Farmers are faced with an abundant crop that is worth very little. Even with a super yield this year, many farmers will be hard pressed to make the income generated by the crop pay all the expenses. However, with the USDA Loan Deficiency Payment (LDP), income from crops may be in creased even if the farmer feeds the crop to his own livestock. While final details have not been approved, farmers will be eligible for payments even if the crop is harvested as silage. There are a few requirements for the payment. First, in simpli- WRONG EXPECTATIONS Background Scripture: 1 Samuel 9:1 through 10:27. Devotional Reading: Psalms 119:1-8. There are two different cur rents running through the Bibli cal account of Saul becoming the King of Israel. One of them is clearly opposed to the idea of Is rael having a king, as in 1 Sam. 8:4-22 and again in 10:17-27, where God is represented as re garding the people’s clamor for a king as a rejection of himself. The other point of view is equally favorable to the idea, as in 9:15-17, when God tells Samuel that he has chosen Saul to be king so that “He shall save my people from the hand of the Phil istines.” Many Biblical scholars believe that two different written ac counts are woven together in these passages with the two points of view remaining unhar monized. Both sources attribute their interpretations as coming from God. In one source, source A, God is favorable to both the monarchy and Saul as king, and in the other, source B, God is negative and accepts the wish of the people with great reluctance. So which of these represents the true will of God? I believe that perhaps both do; furthermore, God may be the source of both, even though they seem to be so in conflict. Often, that is how it is in life. On any issue there may be conflicting perspectives. Many issues are not black and white, right or wrong. We have to sift through the posi tives and negatives of various ideas and proposals. Frequently we can see that fault is not always one-sided. Is that the case here? fled terms, the fanner must have ownership of the crop from the time of harvest until the LDP is requested. Second, the farm where the crop is grown must have a conservation plan or have requested a conservation plan. To request a conservation plan, the farmer needs to contact the county conservation district where the farm is located. In ad dition, the farmer will be charged a filing fee. According to the Lancaster Farm Service Agency office, that fee ranges between $3O and $35 for most farmers. To Learn Details Of LDP Farmers who grew corn, soy beans, wheat, barley, and oats and were not Production Flexi bility Contract (PFC) farms also known as the 7-year program are eligible for Loan Deficiency Pay ment (LDP). Payment rates for LDP are based on the date the crop was sold or fed. The payment rate for crops sold or fed this week was wheat $0.90 per bushel, barley $0.26 per bushel, oats $0.41 per bushel, corn $0.38 per bushel, and soybeans $0.75 per bushel. If the com crop is harvested as silage, the payment is calculated using the value of 7 bushels of com for each ton of silage. For example, if the silage yield were 23.5 tons per acre, the com yield would be 7 times 23.5 for a yield of 164.5 bushels per acre. At the current payment rate, the payment for the com crop would be $62.51 per acre of si- Pros And Cons There were definitely positive aspects of having a king to reign over them. The people wanted and needed human leadership. Perhaps judges were sufficient for both spiritual and temporal matters in the days when Israel first arrived in Canaan. But now they wanted a more centralized authority, a kingdom instead of a loose confederation of tribes. There was something to be said for that. Our country was first gov erned under the Articles of Con federation, a much more decen tralized and weaker form of government than that which re placed it under the Constitution. Americans realized that they would need a centralized gov ernment and ever after we have disagreed on just how strong that centralized government shall be. I believe there are co gent arguments for both more and less central government, for larger and smaller government. Despite the political slogans, truth does not reside on one side alone. In the case of Israel, it is ap parent that those who wanted a king and a kingdom won out eventually. Saul was made king of Israel. But does that mean that those who did not want a king were entirely wrong? I don’t think so. There are always dangers as well as advantages in a strong central government as well as decentralized rule. The U.S. Constitution was de signed with a balance of powers. From the very first days of our republic we have struggled to keep each of those powers from becoming too dominant. One of the most important issues in the American Civil War was strug gle between national power and states’ rights. The war lasted only four years, but the struggle continues probably to the ev erlasting advantage of our coun try. A Warning In source A of 1 Samuel, God lage grown. Take time now to sign up for the LDP at your Farm Service Agency office. To Eat Properly Each day one in 10 Americans eats at least one meal alone. Whether it is an adult having a quick meal from fast food drive-thru or a child microwav ing macaroni and cheese, eating alone has some problems, reports Nancy Wiker, Lancaster County extension family living agent. Diets of people who eat alone often fall short on nutrients. It is not that they eat less nutritious foods but that they tend to skip meals or consume less food be cause of preparation time. For older adults, there is a di rect link between loneliness and lowered intake of calories, calci um, and vitamin A. Children who eat alone tend to eat poorer quality meals than children who dine with family. Some suggestions if you are eating alone: • Do not skip breakfast. • Serve a combination of pre packaged foods with fresh foods. • Purchase already cut fruits and vegetables from the super market salad bar if you cannot use a large amount. • If you are a senior citizen, consider community meals where you may socialize. Whether you eat out or stay at home, make mealtime a pleas ant, important time of day. Feather Prof’s Footnote: “When you are through chang ing, you are through. ” is interpreted as being reluctant to establish a monarchy and hav ing Saul as the monarch. In chapter 8, God asks Samuel to spell out clearly the dangers of a monarchy: .. you shall sol emnly warn them, and show them the way of the king who shall reign over them” and Sam uel paints a pretty bleak picture (8:10-18). God also is interpreted as telling Samuel, “... they have not rejected you, but they have rejected me from being king over them” (8:7). I see in this a warning to us all. We have and will continue to have to choose human leaders, but the danger is that we will give to them the homage that be longs to God alone and expect from them what only God can give. The problem may not be so much with the people wanting leaders, but in virtually deifying those leaders and demonizing their opponents. Is it not true that many Ameri cans will go to the polls in No vember, giving to the human candidates the homage and ex pectations that belong only to the Lord? In choosing between the presidential candidates, we are choosing between two human be ings and neither of them can solve many of the problems we expect them to solve and their “solutions” to these problems will still be human solutions. In choosing one person to be our President, you don’t have to hate or disbelieve the other. Saul was both a “good guy” and a “bad guy.” Aren’t we all? Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building I 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