Wednesday, December 4,1968' THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Wednesday, December 4, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PaneThre "US SMALL FARMS HURT farm programs: Complex of subsidies By DONALD M. ROTHBERG Associated Press Staff Writer First of Two Parts WASHINGTON VP-) - Amer- * ica's farm programs are a mul- tibillion dollar complex of sub- sidies, some of which undermine others, and all of which give little help to the small family farmer. One official view, as express- ed by Secretary of Agriculture # Orville' L. Freeman, is to the contrary. "Today," he says, "we have a wide range of programs aimed at underpinning and strength- ening America's family agricul- ture," But the President's National Advisory Commission on Rural Poverty disagrees. In a report entitled "The People Left Be- hind,' the commission said: "It is clear that the price support and related programs do very little for the rural farm poor and nothing, directly, for the rural non-farm poor." Few, if any, farmers from Mississippi to California agree with Freeman that the pro- grams' aim is to strengthen family agriculture. "No one in his right mind could justify the payments the farmer is getting along with the market price," says Richard Shaw, a Mississippi cotton grow- er. "But I haven't heard of any- one sending a check back." THIS WEEK ONLY! "FASCINATING and GRIPPING!" An examination of the Agri- culture Department's various farm program shows: * Farmers received more than $1 billion this year for holding land out of production, including one payment of $4,091,818 to a single corporate farm, J. G. Boswell Co., of Kings County Calif. O Farmers collected millions of dollars from various pro- grams to help them increase production on the land they did. plant. O As a result, farm produc- tion continued to increase faster than the market could absorb it. thus forcing the government to lay out another $1 billion to support crop prices. * Wealthy Americans are The Personalized Christwas Gift The Monogramined Circle Pin en ratig-no charge 48 hours service Select from 30 St l es, ishes, and Patterns at ii jewelry Store hours: 16 Nickels o-Fri. arcade Sat. \reade 9-5:00 -Kenneth Tynan London Observer going into farming in a big way, but the suspicion persists, especially among some congress men, that the rich are more interested in cultivating tax breaks than crops. WHERE MONEY GOES But direct subsidies, rather than the huge farm pay- ments, breaks, bother congress- men, beset as they are with de- ands for more money for trou- bled cities. Cotton is king on Capitol Hill, primarily because Southerners dominate the agriculture com- mittees of both the Senate and the House. It was for taking land out of cotton production that the Boswell company col- lected more than $4 million. One more prominent recipent was Sen. James O. Eastland of Mississippi, a rankings Demo- crat on the Senate Agriculture Committee. The senator and members of his family got $211,364 for retiring land from production. In an attempt to stop such large outlays, the House passed bill to limit payments to $20,000 to any one farm. Senate con- ferees refused to accept it. Where do all the billions in farm payments go? The President's commission on rural poverty, using cotton as an example, but citing similar fig- ures for rice, wheat, feed grains and sugar, put it this way: "The 10 per cent of cotton producers with the smallest pay- ments receive less than 1 per cent of cotton program bene- fits; the 10 per cent of pro- ducers with the largest pay- ments receive more than half of these benefits; and the top 1 per cent of producers in size of payments receive 21- per cent of the benefits." In all, $1,114,617,466 went to 91,887 farms that received pay- ments of $5,000 or more in 1967. But most of the nation's 3 million farmers received a lot less than $5,000. The average payment per farm in 1967 was $987. And rent or national in- terest aside, far in production is rising despite the money spent to discourage planting. Participation in the federal cotton program is mandatory. If a farmer wants to grow cot- ton he must accept an acreage allotment based upon his total HEAR MICHIGAN HOCKEY and BASKETBALL on WCBN land and the history of cotton production on it. Southeastern growers, fearful of competition from high quality cotton grown in California, made the program mandatory. Eastland told the Senate that if western planters were allowed to grow as much as they wished "that would mean that, in my judgment, the cotton acreage would leave the Southeast and go westward to California." That would have been economically disastrous for the economy of the Mississippi Delta where Eastland, himself owns a large plantation. . Mechanization has revolution- ized cotton growing. It has been a beneficial revolution for those with the land and money to buy and efficiently utilize equip- ment and chemicals. It has also driven small farm- ers off the land and sent thou- sands of unskilled Negroes to northern cities in search of jobs. DISCRIMINATION Some Negro farmers claim there is discrimination in the estimation of projected yields. Clarence Hall Jr., of Issaqiuena County, about 50 miles south- west of Sunflower County, said "the projected yield of all small Negro farmers is put down way, below that of white farmers." Charles Cox, assistant deputy administrator for state a n d county operations in the De- partment of Agriculture, says, however, that all the complaints have been investigated and "very frankly, I've been ex- tremely well pleased that we've found very little evidence of dis- crimination." The Agriculture Department. tries to help the small farmer- the one with cotton allotment of 10 acres or less-by permitting him to plant his entire allot- ment and still collect the diver- sion payment. But these pay- ments average only $114.80 to each small farm., "The smaller farmer just can't make it," Richard Shaw says. Shaw farms 3,000 acres of cropland, 700 of them in cotton. Since he, personally supervises his operation, Shaw's plantation could be called a family farm, even though he himself insists the term is an economic anach- ronism. Bigsplanters like Shaw use large and expensive machinery like a cotton picker that works two, rows at once and costs $20,- BOLD and DARING!" -West German Press Directed by D/sting ished roadway Casts! MARCELLA CISNEY the. news today b) The Associated Press and College Press Service ISRAELI ARMED FORCES bombed and shelled areas of northwest Jordan before dawn yesterday, in an attack described as a retaliatory raid. Israeli authorities charged that Jordanian gunners set off an artillery exchange by firing on eight Israeli farm set- tlements in the Beisan Valley, south of the Sea of Galilee. In response, three formations of jet fighters, combined with Israeli artillery, wrecked 63 houses and damaged 83 oth- ers in the Jordanian village of Kafr Assad. A Jordanian spokesman said the attack killed 14 civilians and wounded 18. He listed seven children among .the dead. " 0 0 EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT GAMEL ABDEL NASSER'S 16 year old regime is being shaken by student-led riots, the worst since he seized power. Reports reaching Beirut, Lebanon suggested an explosion of discontent which even the Israeli issue may not muffle- Nasser maintains the riots were instigated by Israeli subver- sion. Egypt's five universities and all high schools in Alexan- dria have been closed by the government after a student clash with the police killed 16. In the Nile Delta city of Mansoura police fired at demonstrators killing 20 and injuring hun- dreds. SOUTH VIETNAMESE DELEGATES to the Paris peace talks began arriving for the expanded negotiations yesterday. U.S. sources are hopeful that the enlarged talks will be- gin by next week. Government sources in Saigon said the plan to be sub- mitted to the first four-party talks would provide for a scale- down of the fighting, and supervised withdrawal of North Vietnamese troops from the South along with a cutback of U.S. forces. The plan also seeks a "rallying" of the Viet Cong 'to the Saigon government although NFL spokesmen have already re- jected the plan as "ridiculous." The NLF has said it will refuse to negotiate with the South Vietnamese delegation when the expanded talks get under way. South Vietnam has said it will talk only to North Vietnam, not the NLF. A further complication is that the North Vietnamese do not recognize the Saigon government. " 0 " SEN. PHILLIP HART, (D-MICH.) told an audience of auto dealers and executives yesterday that'the consumer is often "not getting his money's worth" in auto repairs. Hart called for government action in three areas to cor- rect the situation: They are: - Legislation for state licensing of auto mechanics and repair shops. -Federal Trade Commission inv.estigation to determine whether manuals which list labor time charges for repairs are price fixing devices. - An investigation by the FTC or the Justice Depart- ment to determine if special repair rates such as those to, fleet owners constitute a violation of anti-trust laws. Hart is chairman of the Senate Antitrust and Monopoly subcommittee, which earlier yesterday opened hearings in Washington into the cost of auto repairs. Prof. William Leonard of Hofstra University told the com- mittee yesterday that- auto repair business "has become a jungle for the consumer.". PRESIDENT-ELECT RICHARD NIXON named edu- cator Lee A. Dubridge his science advisor yesterday in a move to narrow the gap between government and scien- tists. Dubridge, a physicist, is retiring from his present post as president of the California Institute of Technology. In the past he has served as an advisor and consultant to eight fed- eral agencies. According to Nixon, Dubridge will have major responsi- bility in bringing about a scientific research effort in the United States, particularly in the field of peacetime technol-' ogy. Dubridge believes it is important for the nation to reach its announced goals in space, including sending a man to the moon. But, after that mission, he favors a reassessment of the civilian space program. "" 0" THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT, still struggling to make last year's devaluation work, faced new danger signs yesterday from the biggest monthly drain this year on the reserves backing the pound sterling. The drop in reserves resulted from the European money crisis last week when speculators exchanged huge amounts of British pounds and French francs for German marks. The treasury said these reserves, which protect the value of the pound, fell by $196.8 million. It was the largest monthly drop since December 1967, the month after devaluation. 0 * * POLICE CLASHED WITH DEMONSTRATORS in Ita- ly's main port city of Genoa yesterday night as Premier- designate Mariane Rumor struggled to find a government in the midst of a rising wave of disorders. The outbreak of violence in Genoa climaxed one of the gravest days of nationwide turmoil Italy' has experienced in years. In Rome more than 30,000 students cut classes and pour- ed into the downtown area, adding their demands for school reform to protests against police brutality. The large Italian Communist party demanded that gov- ernment police be pulled out of the areas of conflict and that all police throughout the nation be disarmed. College Relations Director I c/o Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008 } Please send me aSheraton Student LD.soIcansaveup to2O%on Sheraton rooms. 000. 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