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...quick wit he often turns on himself. His self-deprecation springs from his country roots in Minnesota. His father was a Methodist minister of Norwegian background who spoke with both a strong accent and a stutter. To augment his $1,800-a-year church salary, he sold corn and cabbages out of his garden. His mother Claribel helped out by giving piano lessons. Fritz, as he was called, had his own chores, like gathering corncobs to burn in the kitchen stove instead of coal. He was an enthusiastic singer who competed in school contests; at Sunday church services the Mondales...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mondale: I Am Ready Now | 4/18/1983 | See Source »

...enormous cutback in planting this year under the new federal payment-in-kind (PIK) program may be a bonanza for some farmers. In return for not planting corn, wheat, rice and cotton crops, farmers will receive up to 95% of their normal yield of these commodities free from Uncle Sam's warehouses. This is an economical way for the Government to reduce the cost of storing surpluses, and it should help the farmer by removing the glut that has caused prices to plunge. But where does it leave the marketers of such items as fertilizer and farm equipment, already...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Getting PIK-ed to Pieces:Federal Payment-in-Kind Program | 4/18/1983 | See Source »

Seed sellers will not suffer as much as other suppliers. Reason: farmers will be buying groundcover seeds to prevent erosion on acreage set aside under PIK. Some such seeds are already in short supply. Says Bob Reichert, a spokesman for DeKalb-Pfizer Genetics, a major seed producer: "Corn, soybean and sorghum seeds will suffer, but our Sudax, a sorghum sudan grass seed, is almost sold out, and our nitrogen-fixing alfalfa blends are in good demand. That eases the impact...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Getting PIK-ed to Pieces:Federal Payment-in-Kind Program | 4/18/1983 | See Source »

Some 7,500 acres of coca are grown by Colombian farmers. Until 1980, José Antonio Monroy, 50, grew corn on his ten acres near San José del Guaviare, southeast of Bogota. Now he tends 15,000 coca bushes. He harvests the leaves three times a year and processes them in a bath of gasoline, sulfuric acid, potassium permanganate and ammonia. "You can't blame me if others get poisoned with this stuff," Monroy says. "This is what they pay me for." Colombia's annual per capita income is about $1,150. From his annual end product, 35 lbs. of paste...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Crashing on Cocaine | 4/11/1983 | See Source »

...Agriculture, 1.2 million of the 2.3 million farms eligible have enrolled in the acreage-reduction program. This overwhelming response means that, of a total of 230.4 million eligible acres, farmers this year will not harvest 32.1 million acres of wheat (35% of eligible land), 39.5 million acres of corn and sorghum (39%), 1.7 million acres of rice (43%), 6.8 million acres of cotton (44%) and 2.3 million acres of barley and oats (12%). As a result, surpluses will begin to shrink. This year's corn crop, predicts the USDA, will be only 5.6 billion bu., far below last year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Going Against the Grain | 4/4/1983 | See Source »

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