Word: corns
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...consumers of the western world rather than on feeding the poor peasants who live next to the plantations. Examples of the effects of such profit-maximizing morality abound, and Lappe and Collins use them unsparingly in their effort to persuade their readers. In Mexico, land that once grew corn for peasants' diets is now used for strawberries and flowers for the U.S. while the people there starve. In Senegal, California-based Bud Antle grows vegetables for the European market; in 1974, when there was a glut in Europe, the company destroyed an entire crop of green beans, because the Senegalese...
America's prodigiously fertile farm lands will yield some 2.04 billion bu. of wheat this year, the third best crop in U.S. history and only 107 million bu. less than the 1976 record. Corn production is approaching 6.1 billion bu., second only to last year's alltime high of 6.2 billion bu. A third basic crop, soybeans, will yield 1.8 billion bu. v. a previous record of 1.5 billion bu. in 1973. Beyond what it can consume and export, the U.S. will have on hand 84 million metric tons of those products at year...
...That the crop-support loan rate be raised from $1.75 a bu. to $2 for corn. The loan rate is a Government-set floor price for grains, used by farmers when they borrow money with their crops as collateral. The proposals do not change the loan rate for wheat (currently $2.25 a bu.). Instead, the Administration increased the "target price" from $2.47 to $3. When market prices fall below the target, Washington will pay out the difference between the loan rate and the target figure-that is 75? per bu. Total cost of the program: $4.4 billion...
...Burds, 44, owner of a 373-acre spread near Peosta, Iowa, says of the Administration plan: "I don't like it, but that's what we'll have to do. We'd sooner go all out and produce, but we can't when corn sells for $1.50 per bu." Says the Wheat Growers Association's Howe: "It's not a good answer, but it's the least bad of things we could...
...inconvenient, sometimes low on quality, but easy on the wallet. At all costs, do not fall prey to what Denholtz calls cut-rate "assembly line" dental sweatshops, where one man said he had all his teeth pulled in 35 seconds while the dentist boasted, "This is just like shelling corn...