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Rural towns are suddenly booming. In Devils Lake, N. Dak., sales have doubled at Bill Bergstrom's Lake Chevrolet, the Western State Bank has a record $8,000,000 in deposits, and the local John Deere dealer cannot keep up with new orders. Perhaps the busiest man in town is Accountant Curtis Brekke, who does the federal tax returns of about 1,000 wheat farmers. This year his clients are obsessed with finding ways to spread out their ample earnings for tax purposes. "For all the years they never had the big money, they didn't pay much...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AGRICULTURE: The Jubilant Farmers | 11/5/1973 | See Source »

...Plemel Jr., 43, figures that he could gross $100,000 on his share of the 2,300 acres that he farms in Ramsey County, N. Dak. He has set off on a buying spree that city people may consider peculiar. New machines are the Cadillacs of a farmer's life. Already, Plemel has bought a $1,400 gardening tractor for his lawn, a $7,000 utility tractor for his barnyard and a $25,000, four-wheel-drive tractor-complete with air conditioning, stereo and a contour seat designed by President John F. Kennedy's back specialist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AGRICULTURE: The Jubilant Farmers | 11/5/1973 | See Source »

...reducing news, editorial and ad space and skimping on newsstand copies. Weeklies and smaller dailies that have no private mills, no huge standing orders with suppliers and no capacity to stockpile large quantities of newsprint were taking even more drastic steps. Some-like the Rapid City (S. Dak.) Journal-have already stopped publishing Saturday editions to conserve dwindling paper supplies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Brighter Alternatives | 9/10/1973 | See Source »

marshals who previously served at Wounded Knee, S. Dak., plus three police tracking dogs from Puerto Rico. In an unusual move, Evans warned tourists against walking on the streets at night and said that he was considering declaring martial law. Still, even many whites recognized that, as the Daily News of nearby St. Thomas editorialized: "All the police in the world will be of little use until the unpleasant truths of racial animosity are accepted and steps taken ... to correct them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE VIRGIN ISLANDS: Panic Among the Continentals | 8/27/1973 | See Source »

Most of the underground activity in Lead, S. Dak., site of the famous Homestake mine, consists of digging for gold. But in recent years, a group of scientists have also been working a mile beneath the surface at Lead to capture elusive emanations from the sun called neutrinos. Traveling at the speed of light and thought to be capable of passing through trillions of miles of solid lead, the ghostlike neutrinos have no mass or electrical charge. They are produced during violent atomic collisions at the core of the sun, and thus are believed to be a vital index...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: A Mixed-Up Sun | 7/23/1973 | See Source »

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