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19. Subsidizing obesity
Hoping to produce thinner waistlines, many doctors --including the American Medical Association --- want Congress to stop subsidizing the production of foods that are high in fat and cholesterol and spend more to promote fruits, vegetables, legumes and grains that are not. That's just what the nation's doctors are doing, saying that federal lawmakers are responsible for the fact that a salad costs so much more than a Big Mac. Hoping to produce thinner waistlines, many doctors --including...
Source

20. To print this article open the file menu and choose Print.
Either your plan works, allowing you to make a living, or it doesn't, indicating you should find a different line of work. A lot of American agriculture operates in an environment where none of the usual rules apply where the important thing is not catering to the consumer, but tapping the Treasury. Print Article This is a printer friendly version of an article from www.washingtontimes.com To print this article open the file menu and choose Print. You try to give customers something they...
Source1 hour ago

21. Periodic Rains Causing Problems For LA Cotton Farmers
Periodic rains have slowed the cotton harvest in northern Louisiana, and farmers say they need a few days of dry weather to bring in a crop projected to produce record yields. Some cotton gins have caught up with their workload and shut down, but Barr said others will be running for a few more weeks. Many farmers this year planted cotton acreage to corn, which was bringing higher prices. He says he knows of no problems with the crop, such as seed sprouting, though he said too much rain...
Source

22. A good year for 'Pumpkin Capital'
With near-perfect weather over the last year, it has been a good year for Texas pumpkin growers. Assiter notes that about 900 acres are currently planted in Floyd County, down from 2,000 acres a decade ago. This year's bottom line has been helped by less-than-ideal conditions in other parts of the country, increasing demand for the Texas crop. But even as pumpkins become more popular, the industry has become far more difficult. The specialty pumpkins include everything from luminas, which...
Source10/27/2007

23. Doctors turn attention to farm bill to fight obesity
Share and Enjoy [?] Hoping to produce thinner waistlines, many doctors -- including the American Medical Association -- want Congress to stop subsidizing the production of foods that are high in fat and cholesterol and spend more to promote fruits, vegetables, legumes and grains that are not. That's just what the nation's doctors are doing, saying that federal lawmakers are responsible for the fact that a salad costs so much more than a Big Mac. Doctors turn attention to farm bill to fight...
Source42 minutes ago

24. Southern farmers like what they see in Senate farm bill
Like House legislation that passed in July, the Senate measure would largely continue price supports for commodity crops such as cotton, peanuts and rice that drive the region's agriculture economy. Farm groups, who have lobbied heavily on the bill, say profit margins in the industry are small for all but the largest of producers. Although the bill would hold peanut price supports roughly flat for another five years, it includes payments for storage costs in bad years. It also would help...
Source

25. Ben Affleck's Boston
By Field Maloney Posted Friday, March 17, 2006, at 1:34 PM ET A scene from Whole Foods grocery It's hard to find fault with Whole Foods, the haute-crunchy supermarket chain that has made a fortune by transforming grocery shopping into a bright and shiny, progressive experience. By Field Maloney Posted Friday, March 17, 2006, at 1:34 PM ET A scene from Whole Foods grocery It's hard to find fault with Whole Foods, the haute-crunchy supermarket chain that has made a fortune by transforming...
Source10/22/2007

26. Farmers look for dry weather to harvest cotton
Many farmers this year planted cotton acreage to corn, which was bringing higher prices. Some cotton gins have caught up with their workload and shut down, but Barr said others will be running for a few more weeks. He says he knows of no problems with the crop, such as seed sprouting, though he said too much rain hindered yield potential in south Louisiana. That's well behind last year, when 92 percent already was in, but just off the five-year average. In the northeast, he said, farmers...
Source

27. Bill appeals to Southern farmers
Like House legislation that passed in July, the Senate measure would largely continue price supports for commodity crops such as cotton, peanuts and rice that drive the region's agriculture economy. Farm groups, who have lobbied heavily on the bill, say profit margins in the industry are small for all but the largest of producers. Although the bill would hold peanut price supports roughly flat for another five years, it includes payments for storage costs in bad years. It also would help...
Source

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