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ARTICLES

Senate ag panel sets farm bill markup for next week

WASHINGTON, April 18, 2012 -The Senate Agriculture Committee expects to have a preliminary version of the 2012 Farm Bill ready by the end of this week, in the hope of beginning the mark-up process next Wednesday, April 25, according to panel Chair Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich.
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Sen. Conrad's Budget: Back to Bowles-Simpson

WASHINGTON, April 18, 2012 -After almost three years of criticism from GOP leaders for not passing a budget, Senator Kent Conrad, D-N.D., will begin a Senate Budget Committee markup Wednesday of President Obama’s Fiscal Commission Budget Plan, the Bowles-Simpson plan. That mix of budget cuts and ta
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Supreme Court may hear appeal in biotech patent dispute

WASHINGTON, April 18, 2012 -Several legal affairs “blogs” have been intrigued recently that the U.S. Supreme Court has asked the Justice Department to express its views about an Indiana farmer’s appeal from lower court decisions upholding Monsanto’s patent on glyphosate-resistant biotech soybeans.
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USDA organic panel wants biotech companies made liable

WASHINGTON, April 18, 2012 -USDA’s own National Organic Standards Board is hoping to push Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack to side with organic farmers in the debate over coexistence. A six-member NOSB ad hoc committee wants his help making biotech companies and biotech crop farmers responsible
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Arguing the labeling case in the court of public opinion

WASHINGTON, April 11, 2012 -Organizers of the effort to persuade FDA to mandate biotech food labels don’t rely only on legal assertions in their 25-page petition. The campaign that collected more than 1 million signatures in support of the petition was calibrated to win public opinion even if its f
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Lack of movement in year-end corn stocks puzzles market

WASHINGTON, April 11, 2012 -Some market-watchers were scratching their heads Tuesday after Agriculture Department forecasters made no changes to their U.S. corn balance sheet in the April Supply & Demand report. Private analysts had anticipated as much as a 100 million bushel reduction in project
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