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...lonely dry-land plains of Foard County in north Texas, Jackie Walker, 46, raised wheat and cotton on 1,300 acres. He lost $60,000 in 1980 and 1981 and, with the prospect of more losses this year, decided to "get out while the getting out was good." Says Walker: "It's heartbreaking to see about ten years' work go down the drain for nothing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hard Times in the Heartland | 4/12/1982 | See Source »

America's 2.4 million farmers are squeezed between rising costs and falling prices. In part, they are the victims of their own remarkable productivity. Last year they turned out record crops of corn (8.2 billion bu.) and wheat (2.8 billion bu.). The 2 billion-bu. soybean harvest was exceeded only in 1979. Oats, barley and grain sorghum also had near record yields, making 1981 probably the most productive year in U.S. farm history. Unfortunately, all that abundance knocked the bottom out of prices. Corn, the nation's biggest cash crop, dropped from $3.60 per bu. in the Chicago...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hard Times in the Heartland | 4/12/1982 | See Source »

...farmers, who have watched grain prices fall sharply because of the recession and an overabundance of commodities, are generally delighted by the influx of Japanese. Nebraska Wheat Grower Jake Sims figures that they have helped add three cents to four cents a bushel to the value of his crop, which currently is worth about $3.70 a bushel. Says he: "I don't care if it's Japanese, or Swedes, or whoever coming in. More competition means a better price, and we can use all the help we can get these days...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Winning Trade | 3/29/1982 | See Source »

...marine paintings were done under the partial spell of Ruisdael's sea pieces, his slim parallelograms of rusty sail leaning on the wind-chopped estuary. Most of all, John Constable was inspired by his sense of nature seen fresh, without evident convention: the patches of scudding sunlight on wheat fields, the broken arc of a rainbow, the painterly delight in filling three-quarters of a canvas with high piling clouds. Time and again, one sees images in Constable that might have been lifted straight from Ruisdael. Hadleigh Castle, 1829, with its tall split tower and ruins behind, virtually repeats...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Opening a Path to Natural Vision | 3/29/1982 | See Source »

Garth Smith, a senior and one of the three, said the group was attempting to plant wheat and cottonwood tree seeds in the area where the cooling basin will...

Author: By Compiled FROM College newspapers, | Title: Nuclear Protesters | 2/6/1982 | See Source »

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