robs blagues U5. h 0 ur Crazy FooeS And Farm Problem Editor's Note: John Slrohm has been farming, talking to farmer or writing about farming since Just about the day he was born w years ago on a farm In ihe horseweed bottoms of the VYa " iash. As an agricultural expert ' and reporter he has eeen all of -; the VS. (including Washington where he has served as a presi dential adviser), Russia, Red China (the only accredited U.S. ' newspaper correspondent to gain " admission), India, Southeast Asia and Latin America. In these trav els, he has been ttruck by the fruel paradox of, America trying to cut Its food production while ; most ot the world Is hungry. This ' t Is the first ot five articles In which ' Slrohm Wis how we got Into such a dilemma and suggests some i solutions. By JOII STROIIM Newspaper Enterprise Assn. NEW YORK (NEA) - The No. 1 fear in the world today Is man's dread of not getting chough food to fill family stom achs. If you could poll all persons on earth, you would find the threat . of quick extinction in atomic war lagging far behind the fear of slow . starvation. "How am I going to feed my; family?" is a plaintive wail 1 ve heard on four continents. ,Yet the U.S. has spent billions o( dollars to hold down food pro duction and threatens farmers . wjth heavy fines If they grow too much. Does this mane sense: The brutal world facts are . these: Two out of three persons . on earth are not getting enough food to work effeclently. I've seen bloated stomachs of mal nourished children In the Mid dle East . . . diseased, disabled, hopeless people In Latin America ; . the dull eyes of apathetic Chinese who have been living on wild roots. ; fanning the hunger fire Is a death race between the feeders and the breeders to determine If tnan can produce as fast as he can reproduce. Every hour S.ono more now mouths are crying to be fed. '. it's a crazy world. While most nations hear waili of hunger, while the Iron Curtain countries des perately try to cone with food BhortaRcs, we wallow in surplus es and spend M billion a year to inrlbe farmers not to crow too jrmoh. .'- Food is a problem In three great .'areas of the world and each Is ?of profound significance to us all ;ai consumers, citizens, and tax payers. The areas are the have ;not nations, the Iron Curtain coun tries, and the United Stales. ; . i. Have . not countries in Asia. Latin America and Africa are underdeveloped because they are underfed. Hungry people are list loss people. Without fuel, the hu- If . I S. II 1- in. U.S. WALLOWS IN SURPLUS While the rest of the world staggers in hunger, America wallows in surplus. The U.S. hat amassed a bulging eight billion dollar hoard of food and fiber with the fantastic rant bill of more than one million dollars a day. man body hits on only a couple of cylinders. What we criticize as lazy "manana" attitude Is often no more than malnutrition. Few of these countries are hold ina. their own in the life and death struggle between produc tion and reproduction. Take Egypt, one of the cra dles of civilization, where an ad vanced agriculture was carried on 5.000 years ago. In IU75, Egypt had 5.7 million acres of cultivated land, and S million people barely getting by. Today, she has 0 mil lion acres and 25 million people- five times as many to be fed from about the same land. Egypt hopes that the Aswan Dam will Irrigate 30 per cent more land over the next 10 years. But by that time she also will have 301 per cent more people: "Two thirds of all mankind are on a treadmill the age-old slrug gle against chronic malnutrition," Dr. B. B. Sen, Director General of the Food and Agricultural Or ganizations of the United Nations told mo recently in his Home headquarters. Many of these people are des perately hungry. Slany more suf fer a debilitation that stunts the desire to help themselves. When man and his family must de vote all their time to growing food for survival, all thoughts and desire for self-help are crowd ed out of their lives. For most of the 70 less de- veloped countries containing l a billions persons, says our De' partment of Agriculture, "diets! are nutritionally inadequate, mal nutrition Is widespread and per sistent, and there is no likelihood the food problems soon will be solved. These people live on the rag ged edge of starvation: a pound of rice or corn a day is a typi cal ration. They have only one acre of land per person to pro duce food, and they use a scant 1.5 pounds of fertilizer per per son. In the U.S., we have almit 2.5 acres and use about 270 pounds of commercial fertilizer per person. No wonder there have hern marches in Mexico that had In he quelled with troops, food riots In ...NO SIN OR SPECTACLE ON EARTH TO EQUAL ITI SODOM mm Brazil and other nations around the globe, Is U.S. surplus the answer to the world's lood problem "No," says Secretary of Agri culture Orville Freeman. "If all our stored up abundance of food were made available abroad to people with inadequate diets, It would not close the lood gap lor even one year. The most our food can pro vide Is a temporary shot in the arm for nations such as India and Egypt while they get set to help themselves. The No. 1 hope of the world's hungry is self-help. In Mexico: I have just seen how a handful of Americans, with a small budg et from the Rockefeller Founda tion, has sparked a chain reaction that has doubled Mexico's fond production in the last 10 years. As a result, her people today get 2.7UO calories to eat compared with a near starvation 1.700 cal orics only 25 years ago. And this despite the fact that her population is the fastest ris mg in Lalln America. Many have not nations have the resources to do likewise. Significance: Underdeveloped areas will remain underdeveloped so long as they cannot get enough to cat. Pouring money and food into these countries Is like pour ing It down a rathole unless It helps them get on their feet. The va. almost alone has the know! edge to do the Job. 2. Food is the Achille s heel of Iron Curtain countries who force their farmers to work col lectively. Food production dropped in every country the Communists took over and I've visited them all. Recent Russian reports reveal food rioting that had to be smashed with Soviet troops. In 195a, as I toured Soviet farms, I saw hlirusncliev s boasts on catching up with U.S. food pro duclion. They were plastered on sign in potato patches, cow barns, pig pens and collective farm headquarters. These wild promises now have been replaced by bitter complaints of failure. The situs tion would be worse except for the fact that a big share of Mils la's fond comes (ram the tinv private plots each fni-mcr has Russia has nearly half of her people on the land. A farmer can feed himself and 3 or 4 others, i In the U.S., under private en terprise, only 8 per cent of the population is on the land, and one farmer produces enough to feed himself and 20 otliers.i Red China Is on the verge of collapse today primarily due ot the mishandling of 500 million peasants. I was- in Red China during the formation of the com munes the only accredited American newspaper corres pondent to penetrate the Bamboo Curtain. I saw the Communists destroying all vestiges of private enterprise such as private farms, prlvale vegetable gardens, even private pigs. More recently, I talked with gaunt refugees who had been eating weeds, leaves and wild roots. From her neighbor. I learned of a mother who threw her three children into a river to drown and then Jumped in to drown with them rather than see them die of slow starva tion. It s a grim fact that 40 mil lion Chinese would have starved last winter If China had not bought grain from Australia and Canada. Unless they can buy more sur plus grain, an equally desperate situation faces the Chinese this winter. (The U.S. taxpayers now pay more than $1 million a day to store surplus crops we don't need.) It Is not mere coincidence thai the best fed Communist countries are Yugoslavia and Poland where Red authorities reluctant ly gnve up trying to herd farm ers into collectives. Red Chinese officials have seen a little light. They now promise peasants their own private pigs and garden plots, in the hopes a little private en terprise will produce more food. (In the U.S. government plan ners want stricter controls' so farmers will produce less. I Significance: We are not doing enough to exploit our food super iority. The developing nations should be told that the Communist way leads to less food and ra tioning. If they want to hitch their wagon to the star of plenty. that's the U.S. Our gift is not food, but know-how and system. 3. The U.S. also has a food problem too much. It has cost the taxpayers 4fl,8 billion the last 20 years as we tried to limit food production. We have the best fed nation on earth. We eat 4.06 lbs. of food daily In a wide variety of vege tables, meats and dairy products, according to the Food and Agri cultural Organization. An Indian cats 1.23 lbs., and 83 per cent of that Is rice. We eat 10 times as much animal protein as the Far East, and our children are Bigger, healthier, stronger. , No (Bimers on earth ever pro duced so much food ... to feed so many . . . such a high quality diet ... at such a reasonable price. But government controls threat en the farmer's efficiency. And does It make any earthly sense in a world of want to threaten farmers with jail if they grow loo much food? (Next: The AIlC's of the Craiy Farm Problem.) PAGE t Monday, February II, 19S3 HERALD AND N'KHS. Klamath Falls. Ore. INCOME TAXES So Your Rtllablt Income TAX CONSULTANT CHAS. HATHAWAY Auditing Bookkttolnt N. 10th TU 4-5471 120 AN AUTOMATIC GAS WATER HEATER COSTS LESS TO BUY-LESS TO USE TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR OLD WATER HEATER ON A NEW "DAY & NIGHT" GLASS LINED WATER HEATER 30-GALLON $30 V: 1 I I' r ' I , I OfipV jr.. MVrV-q . 10 year guarantee 55 . V- , f' J f '-rtrV, ' r' ZiLf ( WiM This Offer is Available Alio Thru Your Plumber l0 ,r t iJtt' ' VfeT? W UTILITIES COMPANY MALNUTRITION IN INDIA Bloatad stomachs mark malnourished children in India. Farmers must produce nough to feed 10 million new mouths every year. POUND OF CORN Typical Latin American daily ra tion is a pound of corn per person. Many are on near starvation diet-of 1,700 calories p- day. 1011 Main Your Gas Company TU 4-5157. Water Shortages Predicted For Klamath Basin Streams c tu. A TIT iAT l'H'tHT)"M A ( .'1 f t Rt I 1 1 ' (U N I " J'tPH r. iKVfkr I'rit At STATION tOi-.-riby.'Oim.t.NTt KY MIX Streamflow In the Klamath Ba sin during the 1SXV3 irrigation sea son will be much below average and the only lands that will have satisfactory water supplies are those served from stored water sources, according to a report re leased today by W. T, Frost, snow survey supervisor for the U S Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service, cooperat ing with Oregon Stale I'niverslly and lime engineer. Most other lands ill have severe water short ages. Water content of mountain snow. pack is the lowest of record for M-C-M presents A JOE PASItRNAK Production DORIS STEPHEN JIMMY MARTHA DAYBOYD-DURANTERAYE I? I In BILLY ROSE'S Willi tht vmditfil tnatic if DODGERS t HART I J J M-llirti ir. nitit HiKiMi Dean JAGGER mctrocolor ( DOOliS OPEN 6:45 SEE JUMBO AT 7:10 & 9:50 Keh t at many key snow courses Present snow Is only a per rent of average and only one-fifth of the Know park of last year at this date. Watershed soils have been fav orably recharged with the mois ture content now up to (U) per cent of total rapacity compared with .) per cent one year ap.o. Storage In I'pper Klamnlh 1-nkc is aoi feet on Feb. 1 com pared with 209.IO0 a f. one year ago. This stnraee is average and even with limited expected In- How will he ali(artory (or irriga tion Clear l-ake stmace Is II2.00O a ( the first of the month or double the water stored a year ago There will be sufficient Irri tation water from this source although carryover for next year will he limited (ierber Mewrvoir now hold' 2S.200 aire (eel compared with only l.lloo a f. one year aeo. In Lake reservoirs i Preliminary data from t! S. Bureau of Reclamation' has been s'lhManlial during the period since Oct I. The totals! are JVono a f and M ono a f. re-! spectivelv tinue to gam .Min nie (nun recent heavy rains and meitint: of miow up to elevations ot 7.000 (cel. Snow pack is neaily record low and summer streamflow will he much Mow average roMillini: drastic "shorlntcs" for moM l.ttinN without occes to stnml water sup plies. The next report on snow sur veys and walrr supply conditions will he issued on March R. I Wit flow yet to come this year will he much below average, but should provide enough Inr satislactoiv irrigation. Karly February inflow from rams aod snow melt h.is been above average iThe above pre hminarv storase data fiunislied hv Ihe Pacific Power ft l.uiit Co xiediord k limit Pit. OrtfM rulttnX itaily (trfl ttl ) " Iwfttllf lrvtn twtltrtt OrtfMMt n Northtrot California KlimilK ivklithin CtrnMr Mam at tip it nana TUMtt Hill lhnf rrvrvnim (or lh Fphrtmrv-t ia act t tM at aMitiaM fnltt fHKH. 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