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         Borlaug Norman:     more books (52)
  1. Norman Borlaug: Hunger Fighter (PA 969) by Don Paarlberg, 1971
  2. The Man Who Fed the World: Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Norman Borlaug and His Battle to End World Hunger by Leon JHesser, 2008
  3. One in six.(From the Editors)(on green revolution): An article from: Commonweal by Unavailable, 2009-10-09
  4. Hungry for biotechnology. (demands for agricultural research projects which could feed the hungry)(Back Page)(Column): An article from: Food Processing by Elizabeth Brewster, 1997-11-01
  5. "The Green Revolution, Peace, and Humanity": An entry from Gale's <i>American Decades: Primary Sources</i>
  6. IN BRIEF.(Main): An article from: The Santa Fe New Mexican (Santa Fe, NM) by Unavailable, 2009-09-13
  7. Commentary.: An article from: Farm Journal by Andrew Burchett, 2005-07-26
  8. The Objective Standard: Spring 2010, Vol. 5, No. 1 by Steve Simpson, Paul Hsieh, et all 2010-03-15
  9. The Boy Who Changed the World by Andy Andrews, 2010-08-31

61. Norman Borlaug: Forgotten Benefactor Of Humanity -- Center For Global Food Issue
norman borlaug, the agronomist whose discoveries sparked the Green Revolution,has saved literally millions of lives, yet he is hardly a household name.
http://www.highyieldconservation.org/articles/forgotten_benefactor.html

La declaración en el español
A declaração em Portugese Déclaration en français
Forgotten Benefactor of Humanity
Norman Borlaug, the agronomist whose discoveries sparked the Green Revolution, has saved literally millions of lives, yet he is hardly a household name. The Atlantic Monthly
By Gregg Easterbrook
January 1997

Borlaug is an eighty-two-year-old plant breeder who for most of the past five decades has lived in developing nations, teaching the techniques of high-yield agriculture. He received the Nobel in 1970 , primarily for his work in reversing the food shortages that haunted India and Pakistan in the 1960s. Perhaps more than anyone else, Borlaug is responsible for the fact that throughout the postwar era, except in sub-Saharan Africa, global food production has expanded faster than the human population, averting the mass starvations that were widely predicted for example, in the 1967 best seller Famine 1975! The form of agriculture that Borlaug preaches may have prevented a billion deaths.
Yet although he has led one of the century's most accomplished lives, and done so in a meritorious cause, Borlaug has never received much public recognition in the United States, where it is often said that the young lack heroes to look up to. One reason is that Borlaug's deeds are done in nations remote from the media spotlight: the Western press covers tragedy and strife in poor countries, but has little to say about progress there. Another reason is that Borlaug's mission to cause the environment to produce significantly more food has come to be seen, at least by some securely affluent commentators, as perhaps better left undone. More food sustains human population growth, which they see as antithetical to the natural world.

62. Norman Borlaug On The Paula Gordon Show
norman borlaug is the Father of the Green Revolution. Even as a Midwesternfarm boy in the Depression, norman borlaug hated the site of human misery.
http://www.paulagordon.com/shows/borlaug/
The Paula Gordon Show A NOBEL PEACE PRIZE FOR FOOD
Norman E. Borlaug
3 min:07 secs Norman Borlaug's life is a tribute to what one person can do in the face of enormous obstacles: he has saved more lives than anyone in history. He has done it in the face of world wars, civil wars, famines, riots and bureaucratic obduracy. Norman Borlaug is the Father of the Green Revolution. In 1970, he received the Nobel Peace Prize for his work. Now in his mid-80's, Dr. Borlaug is still fiercely committed to the fundamental importance of feeding the world's people.  He believes the ability to feed "the population monster" is central to civilization's survival. Human progress itself is at stake. In case you've forgotten, the Green Revolution made it possible to feed millions of people in India and Pakistan in the 1960's, people who otherwise would have starved to death. Grain yields were increased six fold. But the Green Revolution was about much more than just developing new seeds. Farmers had to learn how to plant those new seeds, how to fertilize the land, how to control the weeds and how to irrigate. Dr. Borlaug placed his bets on small farmers and won. Even as a Midwestern farm boy in the Depression, Norman Borlaug hated the site of human misery. That hasn't changed, though he's now seen enough misery world-wide to fill many lifetimes. He shares his sense of urgency when he talks about today's human misery and that which he anticipates if we cannot feed people. For starters, he's certain misery will not stay at home. You can't build peace on empty stomachs, he cautions. He's equally confident that if there is an "explosion" as he fears, not only will desperate people find their way across oceans and deserts, there will also be opportunists fishing in troubled waters.

63. New Patriot: Norman Borlaug
UPDATE You can also listen to the norman borlaug Rap , written by one MC Tractor.posted by Mark D. @ 1057 PM
http://newpatriot.org/2005/07/norman-borlaug.html
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Norman Borlaug It's a wonderful thing to see the University of Minnesota's own Norman Borlaug father of the Green Revolution as today's featured article at Wikipedia . The honor ain't quite as permanent as his 1970 Nobel Peace Prize , but it's much cooler. I doubt that any print encyclopedias have Borlaug articles with this sort of depth and fascination.
I've often parted ways with my environmentalist brothers and sisters (including many Green Party members) about the Green Revolution: I believe quantity and access to food actually feeding people should always trump issues of organic, genetic, or hydrological purity. Borlaug puts it best in a quote from the article: "Some of the environmental lobbyists of the Western nations are the salt of the earth, but many of them are elitists. They've never experienced the physical sensation of hunger. They do their lobbying from comfortable office suites in Washington or Brussels. If they lived just one month amid the misery of the developing world, as I have for fifty years, they'd be crying out for tractors and fertilizer and irrigation canals and be outraged that fashionable elitists back home were trying to deny them these things." Congratulations, Dr. Borlaug, may you remain among us another ninety years...

64. Dr. Borlaug's Green Revolution
Dr. norman borlaug was born and raised on an Iowa farm and studied plant pathologyat the University of Minnesota in the nineteen thirties.
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Norman Borlaug and the Green Revolution
Dr. Norman Borlaug was born and raised on an Iowa farm and studied plant pathology at the University of Minnesota in the nineteen thirties. In 1944 he was asked by the Rockefeller Foundation to work in Mexico on a project to improve productivity of wheat. He and his staff worked for twenty years to develop a dwarf variety of wheat that put less of its energy into growing tall and more of its energy into growing fat kernels, while resisting several different plant pests. In 1965 he moved his attention to India and Pakistan, where he began a massive education campaign to get the new varieties to farmers, while continuing to further improve them. The results were dramatic indeed. Since 1970, the total yields of wheat in these two countries have increased by nearly ten times. This is why, despite the doubling of their populations, the populations of India and Pakistan are better fed today than at any time since 1965. The International Rice Research Institute modelled its methods on Borlaug's work with wheat, and later with corn, and has had similar outstanding success.

65. Norman Borlaug - The Peaceful Revolutionary
borlaug.jpg norman borlaug with his bust in the University of Minnesota s norman borlaug packed a full schedule when he visited Minnesota in May 2004.
http://www.coafes.umn.edu/borlaug.html
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Norman Borlaug Norman Borlaug - The Peaceful Revolutionary Norman Borlaug with his bust in the University of Minnesota's Borlaug Hall, October 2003. Norman Borlaug, Nobel Peace Prize laureate who is credited by many for saving more lives than any other scientist, received his Master's and his Ph.D. in Plant Pathology from our College. Borlaug played a major role in the Green Revolution that increased food self sufficiency in many countries. Norman Borlaug packed a full schedule when he visited Minnesota in May 2004. He appeared on KTCA-TV's Almanac, gave our College's commencement address, was introduced at the opening sessions of the Minnesota Senate and House of Representatives, met with student leaders, spoke to our College's Assembly and exchanged ideas with University and state leaders. Click here to hear his appearance on ALMANAC. This web site includes information on the background and life of Norman Borlaug. In This Section Borlaug and the University of Minnesota Borlaug's Work in Mexico The Beginning of the Green Revolution Political Aspects of the Green Revolution ... Borlaug's E.C. Stakman Graduate Student Fellowship Endowment Fund

66. ABC News: Person Of The Week: Norman Borlaug
Person of the Week norman borlaug. norman borlaug on a Quest for HungerFreeWorld April 2 norman borlaug may have saved a billion lives.
http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/PersonOfWeek/story?id=131587&page=1

67. Articles Teachers And Students
Nobel Peace Prize winner norman borlaug originally intended to pursue a career in Green Giant Nobel Laureate norman borlaug is Credited with Saving the
http://whybiotech.ca/index.asp?id=4075

68. Michael Williams -- Master Of None: Africa Is SNAFU
norman borlaug father of the Green Revolution and savior of more than a billionlives is convinced that Africa could grow food for the world if its
http://www.mwilliams.info/archives/004216.php
Michael Williams Master of None
Where our motto is:
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March 25, 2004
Africa is SNAFU
Michael Williams
International Affairs
Lying Media Bastards points to a horrible atrocity in west Africa and writes: As is the norm for Africa, this story is getting NO play in the American press. He's right that the story isn't getting much play, just as the much larger Rwandan massacres of the 1990s (supervised by Kofi Annan, who is now the UN Secretary General) didn't. Why is that? There are a lot of reasons. As I've written before , Africa is all screwed up and atrocities like this are pretty normal. We've tried sending money , but most of it gets stuck in Swiss bank accounts held by oppressive tyrants rather than spent on improving the lives of the African people. Africa has no democratic institutions and no cultural foundation for concensus-based majority rule.

69. Norman Borlaug
Norwegian American Hall of Fame tribute to norman borlaug.
http://www.lawzone.com/half-nor/borlaug.htm
Norwegian American
Agronomist, Botanist
Winner, 1970 Nobel Peace Prize
Father of the "Green Revolution"

Photo courtesy of the Paula Gordon Show Links The Nobel Prize in Peace, 1970
The Nobel Foundation High Profile: Norman Borlaug Forgotten Benefactor of Humanity
The Atlantic Monthly
Billions Served

Reason Magazine Dr. Norman E. Borlaug
Oklahoma State University A Nobel Peace Prize for Food
The Paula Gordon Show Norman Borlaug International Forum CLICK BELOW TO RETURN TO THE...

70. Dr Norman Borlaug Visits ICARDA
Dr norman borlaug delivering his lecture on 9 May at CWANA Wheat Meeting at Farmer Mr Saleh AlJaseem hugged Dr norman borlaug and thanked him for his
http://www.icarda.org/HomePageStory/DrNormanBorlaugVisitsICARDA.htm
"You can't eat potential. You've got to convert it to production and get it distributed into the empty stomachs." Dr Norman Borlaug tells scientists
Dr Norman E. Borlaug, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate and founder of the World Food Prize, visited ICARDA on 8-12 May 2005 to address the participants of the "CWANA Wheat Meeting" and review the wheat improvement research in the region.
Prof. Dr Adel El-Beltagy (second from right), Director General, and Dr Robert Havener (right), former Chair, Board of Trustees of ICARDA, presented Dr Norman Borlaug (second from left), with a portrait of himself made with seeds of ICARDA's mandate crops. Standing on the left is Mr Christopher Dowswell, Director of Program Coordination, Sasakawa Africa Association.
Respected worldwide for the key role he played in bringing about the Green Revolution that saved millions of people from starvation especially in Asia, Dr Borlaug, 91, continues to pursue fighting hunger through scientific research as the leader of the Sasakawa Africa Association, working from his laboratories at CIMMYT in Mexico.
Welcoming Dr Borlaug to ICARDA, the D

71. Norman Borlaug's Legacy
norman borlaug s Legacy The clamor over genetically enhanced crops has reacheda fevered pitch norman borlaug, you may be the greatest man in history.
http://www.consumerfreedom.com/news_detail.cfm/headline/2635
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September 2, 2004
Norman Borlaug's Legacy The clamor over genetically enhanced crops has reached a fevered pitch in France. In the last few months, a group of neo-luddite radicals have crisscrossed the countryside razing fields and sowing baseless paranoia. In one evening alone, more than 1,500 people led by anti-globalization militant Jose Bove tore the crops out by their roots as police stood by and watched. "For us," Bove has exclaimed, "this combat will not stop." While an alarming number of Gauls have found an inauspicious hero in Bove, Third World farmers have their own champion in the person of Norman Borlaug . And although they probably don't know him by name, Borlaug (father of the "Green Revolution," which dramatically increased agricultural yields in the 1960s and 70s) is slowly becoming an unlikely folk hero. When Borlaug's career began, a scaremonger named

72. Rockefeller Foundation
The life story of norman borlaug is a story of hard work and determination tohelp farmers Thus norman borlaug began the first phase of his life s work.
http://www.rockfound.org/display.asp?context=3&SectionTypeID=17&DocID=87

73. Norman Borlaug -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article
norman borlaug. Categories People in food and agriculture occupations, norman Ernest borlaug (born 25 March 1914) is considered by some to be the
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/n/no/norman_borlaug.htm
Norman Borlaug
[Categories: People in food and agriculture occupations, Humanitarian aid, Scientists, Agriculture, Norwegian-Americans, Humanitarians, Nobel Peace Prize winners, 1914 births]
Norman Ernest Borlaug (born 25 March 1914) is considered by some to be the "father of modern (The class of people engaged in growing food) agriculture " and the father of the (The introduction of pesticides and high-yield grains and better management during the 1960s and 1970s which greatly increased agricultural productivity) green revolution . His efforts in the (The decade from 1960 to 1969) to introduce crossbred seeds into agricultural production in (A Muslim republic that occupies the heartland of ancient south Asian civilization in the Indus River valley; formerly part of India; achieved independence from the United Kingdom in 1947) Pakistan and (A republic in the Asian subcontinent in southern Asia; second most populous country in the world; achieved independence from the United Kingdom in 1947) India saved over a billion people from starvation.
Borlaug was born in (Click link for more info and facts about Cresco) Cresco (A state in midwestern United States) Iowa (The army of the United States of America; organizes and trains soldiers for land warfare)

74. Norman Borlaug: Solving World Hunger Through Genetics By James K. Glassman -- Ca
It s time the world paid attention to the work of people like borlaug and Sanchez,rather than to the antibiotech fanatics whose resistance postpones the
http://capmag.com/article.asp?ID=2106

75. Population News - August 12, 1997
The norman borlaug Special Issue. Normal borlaug is the most important personyou ve probably never heard of before. Only one of three living Americans to
http://www.overpopulation.com/population_news/1997/popnews_08_12_1997.html

76. Norman Borlaug Special Issue Of Population News
norman borlaug Special Issue of Population News. By Brian Carnell. Tuesday, August12, 1997. Normal borlaug is the most important person you ve probably
http://www.overpopulation.com/articles/1997/000018.html

77. Norman Borlaug Bio
Dr. norman E. borlaug stands with a select few at the pinnacle of a research andteaching profession norman E. borlaug was born in Cresco, Iowa in 1914.
http://yorklecture.ifas.ufl.edu/Borlaug.htm
UF/IFAS Home York Lecturer Home
York Lecturer Series
Inaugural York Lecturer Biographical Sketch:
Dr. Norman E. Borlaug
Senior Scientist Emeritus, Rockefeller Foundation,
1970 Nobel Laureate
"World Hunger: What to Do?"
Dr. Norman E. Borlaug stands with a select few at the pinnacle of a research and teaching profession dedicated to the alleviation of world hunger and suffering. His visit and lecture are an appropriate way to inaugurate the York Distinguished Lecturer Series, particularly with the world focus on famine in Ethiopia and the population explosion in Africa. Norman E. Borlaug was born in Cresco, Iowa in 1914. He received a B.S. in forestry from the University of Minnesota in 1937. After three years with the U.S. Forest Service in Idaho and Massachusetts, he returned to the University of Minnesota where he received the M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in plant pathology in 1940 and 1941. Borlaug served as an instructor while he was a graduate student at Minnesota. From 1942 and 1944, he worked as a microbiologist for E.I. Dupont and Company, Wilmington, Delaware, where he conducted research on agricultural chemicals.

78. Cornell News: Norman Borlaug Speaks At CALS Centennial
Nobel Peace Prize laureate norman borlaug spoke April 29, 2005, as part of thecentennial observance of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at
http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/May05/CALS.symposium.jg.html
May 4, 2005 Nobel laureate Norman Borlaug addresses innovation and sustainability in final salute to CALS centennial
Norman Borlaug By Jeanne Griffith ITHACA, N.Y. "The whole issue of sustainability is a difficult one, because it's sustainability for how many and at what standard of living? This we should never forget," said Nobel Peace Prize laureate Norman Borlaug, speaking April 29 as part of the closing centennial observance of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS) at Cornell University. Borlaug, whose work to improve wheat yields throughout the developing world launched Asia's green revolution of the 1960s and 1970s, spoke at the Golden Age of Innovation Symposium, which also featured Per Pinstrup-Andersen, the H.E. Babcock Professor of Food, Nutrition and Public Policy and a professor of applied economics at Cornell, and Maxine Singer, former president of the Carnegie Institution in Washington, D.C., and a molecular geneticist during a three-decade research career at the National Institutes of Health. Pinstrup-Andersen was the 2001 recipient of the World Food Prize, a $250,000 award conceived by Borlaug in 1985. Opening the symposium, Cornell President Jeffrey Lehman noted 80 years of CALS involvement in international agriculture and the college's central importance in Cornell's role as a transnational university. His remarks were punctuated by protests from students opposing Cornell's plans to locate a parking lot on West Campus.

79. The Life Of Dr. Norman Borlaug
Dr. norman borlaug, Nobel Peace Prize winner, turns 90.
http://www.globalenvision.org/library/6/604/
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    The Life of Dr. Norman Borlaug
    Dr. Norman Borlaug, Nobel Peace Prize winner, turns 90.
    Working in Mexico in the mid-1960s, Dr. Norman Borlaug - a central figure in the "green revolution" - and his team developed a special breed of dwarf wheat that resisted a wide spectrum of plant pests and diseases and produced two to three times more grain than the traditional varieties. Borlaug introduced this wheat to India and Pakistan, which, after years of drought, were on the verge of famine. Wheat production quadrupled in a decade; by today that increase is tenfold. By 1974 India was self-sufficient in the production of all cereals. Pakistan progressed from harvesting
    3.4 million tons of wheat annually when

80. Ninemsn Encarta - Borlaug, Norman Ernest
borlaug, norman Ernest (1914 ), American agronomist and Nobel laureate. He wasborn in Cresco, Iowa, Find more about borlaug, norman Ernest from
http://au.encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761571766/Borlaug_Norman_Ernest.html
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    Subscription Article ninemsn Encarta Premium: Get this article, plus 35,000 other articles, an interactive atlas, dictionaries, study centre, and more. Learn more. This article is exclusively available for ninemsn Encarta Premium Subscribers. Already a subscriber? Sign in above. Borlaug, Norman Ernest Borlaug, Norman Ernest (1914- ), American agronomist and Nobel laureate. He was born in Cresco, Iowa, and educated at the University of Minnesota.... Related Items Wheat Multimedia Want more Encarta? Become a subscriber today and gain access to:
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