Monday, Nov. 27, 1978
The New Farmer
To the Editors:
Your article on big-time farming [Nov. 6] was a refreshing insight into a business that few people regard as such. The amazing bounty that agricultural scientists like Mr. Benedict are able to produce is a tremendous hope to starving people the world over, and the best way to counter our rising import costs.
Ron Soussa Boston
American food, like American farming techniques, will never be the hope of the lesser developed countries. Our current large-scale farming practices are built on our ability to squander cheap energy on fertilizers, mechanization and irrigation, not on a desire to increase the efficiency of human toil without replacing it. As energy gets continually more expensive and the overused water tables continue to drop, we shall reap as we have sown.
Stephen L. Blythe Roslindale, Mass.
I'm happy to see that it's still possible for a young man, operating under what remains of the free-enterprise system, to make a success of farming. However, let's not forget that this success is largely built on the increasing concentration of a limited and highly vital resource (land) in the hands of fewer and fewer individuals. Now I'm wondering how soon it will be before moated castles, surrounded by hovels for the serfs, begin to sprout on those precious acres.
Steven G. Kruse, M.D. Huxley, Iowa
You have called the shots straight down the line. I am a farmer in the 300-to-400-acre bracket, and it is not enough anymore to work by the sweat of one's brow. The hard work now is pushing a pencil and a pocket calculator. Those who talk about our tractors with air conditioning and radios should know that we who still must drive a tractor must also plan and keep up with the changing markets on our radios.
H. Wayne Cooper Gumboro, Del.
I'm glad I still know small farmers; people who care for the land and don't feel the need to rip out lovely old shade trees. Mr. Benedict is no farmer; he's just another Big Businessman.
Betty Hamilton Evansville, Wis.
Premature Award
The Nobel Peace Prize [Nov. 6] will no doubt encourage Sadat and Begin in their arduous task, but it is this writer's view that the awards were premature. A successful peace settlement should bring world recognition to Sadat and Begin, or to whoever accomplishes it, only after it happens.
Nicholas A. Bucur Cleveland
By not including President Carter in the award, the Nobel Committee has proved that the Peace Prize has no meaning whatsoever.
Magda K. Jensen Oakland, Calif.
Wall of Democracy
After reading "Justice's Wall," about building a fence between parts of the U.S. and Mexico [Oct. 30], I'm having trouble determining which side of the fence the barbarians are on. Have we decided to protect ourselves from the world, or the world from us? Will our next step be two hundred yards of minefield next to the fence?
And what shall we call this wonder that would make Brezhnev and company envious? How about the Great Wall of Democracy or the Great Wall of "Give Me Your Tired, Your Poor," etc.
Stuart Craig Smith San Diego
A wall between Mexico and the U.S. separates not only Mexico, but also all of Latin America, from the U.S.
James Cruzvergara O'Fallon, III.
Seeing Is Believing
Charles Silberman, author of Criminal Violence Criminal Justice [Nov. 6], is a confused man.
Mr. Silberman, how can you say that "making people believe that the law works--and works fairly" is a better way to stop crime than to arrest and convict the criminals? In my opinion, seeing is believing, and the only way one can believe that our law system works is to see it working. What better proof of sight do we have than the arrest and conviction of the criminals in our society?
Mike Jung Ballwin, Mo.
Did Jack the Ripper originate in Cincinnati? Was the Phantom of the Rue Morgue born and raised in Waco, Texas? No! Each country has had its fair share of crime and criminal characters. I am deeply offended to think Charles Silberman implies that criminal violence is restricted to being a popular American pastime. I am reluctant to believe that rape, robbery and murder are synonymous with hot dogs, apple pie and Ford products, as the title of this article, "As American as Jesse James," would imply. Colleen Thayer St. Louis
I found it enlightening to learn that there is someone like Silberman who understands the problems of black people. For years I've heard people say that blacks have no sense of value--no morals. In other words, they're worthless. The bad part about this is that some of the blacks believe the things they hear, and others are living up to it. Society has been very cruel to the poor, especially the blacks. Black men had to permit their women and children to be abused without lifting a finger, because the law wouldn't protect blacks. As a result, some blacks have developed handicaps in dealing with society. Until such things as poor housing, education and lack of jobs are corrected, we might as well look forward to the rapes, muggings and murders.
Jerlyn Smith New York City
Polish Haven
I disagree with your comment regarding "Poland's history of antiSemitism" in the story on John Paul II [Oct. 30]. Until Poland was divided among Prussia, Russia and Austria in the 18th century, it was a haven for Jews, who were often persecuted in the rest of Europe.
Michael Olizar London
Double Trouble
With women in the Army [Oct. 30] we will have more fighting power than we did. The only problem is that the men will not like having women in higher ranks than they. It would be bad enough to have a war between the U.S. and another country, but to have a war between the women and the men in the Army would be double trouble.
James Fisher Tampa
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