J. Frank McGill, affectionally known throughout the Georgia agricultural community as âMr. Peanut,â passed away surrounded by family on March 3 at age 95 in Tifton, Georgia.
He earned a bachelorâs degree in agronomy in 1951 and a masterâs degree in agronomy in 1962 from the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.
He began his career with UGA as a county Extension agent in southwest Georgia and later became the stateâs Extension peanut specialist. McGill worked at the Coastal Plain Experiment Station â now known as the UGA Tifton campus â and helped develop a âpackage approachâ for peanut production, which includes management of land preparation, environmental control, variety selection and harvesting. From 1954 to 1982, McGillâs expertise helped Georgiaâs peanut yields increase from 955 pounds per acre in 1955 to 2,040 pounds in 1967 and 3,220 pounds in 1974.
University of Georgia College of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences
J. Frank McGill, affectionally known throughout the Georgia agricultural community as “Mr. Peanut,” passed away surrounded by family on March 3 at age 95 in Tifton, Georgia.
He earned a bachelor’s degree in agronomy in 1951 and a master’s degree in agronomy in 1962 from the University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.
He began his career with UGA as a county Extension agent in southwest Georgia and later became the state’s Extension peanut specialist. McGill worked at the Coastal Plain Experiment Station now known as the UGA Tifton campus and helped develop a “package approach” for peanut production, which includes management of land preparation, environmental control, variety selection and harvesting. From 1954 to 1982, McGill’s expertise helped Georgia’s peanut yields increase from 955 pounds per acre in 1955 to 2,040 pounds in 1967 and 3,220 pounds in 1974.�
last week, wolf blitzer spoke with harry reid about u.s. efforts in afghanistan. listen. are you confident this is going to work in the end in afghanistan? it looks like a mess over there. i am not confident it is going to work. i am happy to say that general petraeus in the room next door, he thinks things are going well. i have great respect for him. i hope it is going well. the american people and rightfully so have a very short attention span. we can not continue to keep dumping this money. into afghanistan, he means. congressman, ron paul, joins us by phone. thank you for joining us. thank you. good to be with you you. why do you think house speaker boehner and this group of lawmakers visited afghanistan? i think they sincerely believe that our policy toward afghanistan is a good policy and we have to pursue it. he doesn t want the president to back off. the odds of the press backing off are slim to none. so i think it represents the
apartment. now our daily dose of health news. let s talk peanuts. you can still get a pack of them on most planes. you know those little packets. last year the department of transportation offered all kinds of ideas to protect people with peanut allergies. one option was a total peanut ban. but the government says there is actually a 12-year-old law that blocks them from tampering with the peanut policy. some airlines have their own rules. some no longer serve peanuts. and others say they might set up peanut-free zones, but the government cannot force the airlines to stop handing out those little teeny tiny bags of peanuts with about ten peanuts inside. it s eerie and it s dangerous. the radiation dangers around the fukushima nuclear plant. we get an exclusive look at the homes left behind in the wake of that disaster. that s in the next hour of the cnn newsroom. [ sneezes ] allergies? you think i have allergies?
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