Abstract

Back, in 1935, Henry A. Wallace, the corn breeder and editor who became Secretary of Agriculture, decided to devote one whole Yearbook or Agriculture to plant and animal genetics. The Yearbook evolved into a series on all the major sciences that are inseparably tied in with modern farming in the United States. The next volume was “soils and men.” Next came the big Yearbook on nutrition called “Food and life.” Then we did the current Yearbook, on social and economic problems in agriculture, called “Farmers in a changing world.” So we come to the Yearbook on weather and climate in relation to agriculture, which will be called “Climate and man” and will be out sometime in the summer of 1941.

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