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Doran Dole, the Senator's father, managed the Norris Grain Co. grain elevator and ran a small creamery, feed and seed business on the side. Bina Dole took in sewing to help out, and made many of the clothes for Robert, his brother Kenneth and his two sisters, Gloria and Jean. Recalls a neighbor: "The Doles just didn't have anything when the kids were growing up." To help out, Bob Dole jerked sodas after school at C.R. Dawson's for $1 a day. Saturday afternoons he and his friends would take in the matinee...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Has Gun, Will Travel | 8/30/1976 | See Source »

...tourist route: the Nelson Gallery of Art (also the scene of an enormous 1,500-guest reception attended by Vice President Nelson Rockefeller the evening before the convention began); the Mission Hills district, straddling the Missouri-Kansas border, where $250,000 mansions abound, built with fortunes based on grain, livestock, chemicals, candy, banking and real estate; and the dozens of magnificent fountains which dot the city like diamond studs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE HOST CITY: A Touch of Class in the Heartland | 8/30/1976 | See Source »

Thus the tin-pot tyrant of the Carib bean island the buccaneers desire to free is shown to be a homosexual with decided S-M leanings. But psychopathology runs against the grain of a free, open form that numbers among its prime attractions the promise of not bothering to delve into such dark and irrelevant mat ters. Genevieve Bujold, as the high-spirited, high-born maiden with whom Rob ert Shaw, as the pirate leader, is naturally expected to carry on a fighting romance, is required to get into a duel with him. Presumably, that is something the athletic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Sunken Galleon | 8/30/1976 | See Source »

...agriculture. It is true that the Soviet Union suffers from natural handicaps, including bad weather and arid soil. Even so, the basic problem is its communal farming system, which fails to provide the farmers with sufficient motivation. The dismal results are well known; Moscow must buy huge tonnages of grain from the profit-seeking farmers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Essay: Profits: How Much Is Too Little? | 8/16/1976 | See Source »

...their crops shriveled. "My potatoes that should be fist-sized are as big as my thumb," complained a farmer near the small Bavarian village of Hersbruck. "That's what this cursed weather has done." The drought has also turned what promised to be a record British grain harvest into a disaster, lowering harvest expectations from 17.5 million tons to an anticipated 13.8 million. The grain shortage, in turn, is expected to drive the price of animal feed up by some 20%, thus raising the price of beef. Agricultural losses in Germany could be as much as $2 billion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: The World's Climate: Unpredictable | 8/9/1976 | See Source »

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