Word: sharing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Writer Ed Shook was a city boy in the farm country, worked from time to time on a farm in southern Missouri, did his share of agricultural reporting as a staffer on the Kansas City Star. Reporter Art White was a town boy in city territory (Orange, N.J.) who has what might be called a consuming interest in agriculture. After one magnificent dinner at the Shuman farm, both White and his subject had to suspend the interview for an afternoon nap. Researcher Pat Gordon, who comes from Houston and remembers pleasant vacations on her grandfather's ranch in western...
...next decade, at least, the logical solution to the farm problem -if logic is ever applied to it-may well lie in a slow, carefully phased, commodity-by-commodity lowering of price supports. At the same time, the Great Society should be able to afford a larger share of its anti-poverty funds for rural America, to provide jobs and training programs so that those who prefer to stay on the land are not forced into the cities. All this, coupled with direct, market-price purchases of commodities for the Food for Peace Program by the Government-rather than siphoning...
...TUNISIA. With one of the highest per capita aid rates ($15 a year, roughly equal to the average share of U.S. citizens in the aid tab), this dry and dusty country is rapidly being turned into a gigantic orchard. President Bourguiba has pushed the plan to sink most of $397 million in economic aid since 1958 into fruit and vegetable production...
...Yankees Keep Silent," underscoring the student belief that Washington is behind Park's Japan policy; things were not helped by recent announcement of U.S. plans to increase procurement in Japan of military items needed in Viet Nam and readily available in Korea. "While Korean soldiers are to share their blood in Viet Nam, Japan is to enjoy the economic windfall," muttered a Seoul newspaper...
...comradeship-in-alms last? The pragmatic need now, as the churches see it, is to join with the state to eradicate social evil; the pragmatic need tomorrow may well be for the church to stand in prophetic judgment against the state. But at the moment, the churches seem to share the undoctrinaire attitude of the South Side Chicago minister who announced that the church was starting a series of neighborhood welfare projects supported by federal money. "Some of you are probably wondering how we're going to square this with our theory of separation of church and state," said...