July 11, 2007
Texas A&M's Borlaug To Receive Congressional Gold Medal
Writer: Kathleen Phillips, 979-845-28272,ka-phillips@tamu.edu
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Texas A&M Agriculture's Dr. Norman Borlaug will be
presented the Congressional Gold Medal July 17 for unparalleled efforts at
"bringing radical change to world agriculture and uplifting humanity,"
according to the U.S. Congress.
The presentation of the medal, created specifically for Borlaug at the
U.S. Mint, will be at 10 a.m. in the Capital Rotunda.
Borlaug, 93, received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 - the first ever to
receive the prize for agricultural efforts - for his international
research which led to wheat varieties that helped feed millions of
starving people. He is distinguished professor of soil and crop sciences
at Texas A&M University where he has been actively teaching, lecturing and
consulting since 1984.
In measures passed by the Senate last September and the House in
December, Borlaug was credited with "saving billions of people around the
world ... (he) saved more lives than any other person who has ever lived."
"Dr. Borlaug's life-long work in fields throughout the world is a
shining example of the importance of agriculture, not only for feeding
starving people, but for economic and political stability," said Dr. Elsa
Murano, Texas A&M University System vice chancellor and dean of
agriculture and life sciences. "We are honored to have shared in his work
for more than two decades at Texas A&M, and we applaud this recognition of
his legacy."
Borlaug is often called the "Father of the Green Revolution" to depict
the color and quantity of wheat planted in the world as a result of his
development of smaller, easier-to-harvest plants which were nurtured the
fertilizer, water and weed-preventing chemicals.
"There is no magic in high-yielding seed," Borlaug once said. "People
have to know how to grow, when to plant, how to control weeds, how to
manage water."
He bred a dwarf wheat first in Mexico because the traditional varieties
there grew so tall that the stalks would bend over, losing the grain heads
on the ground. His developments increased Mexican wheat production
sixfold.
From there, Borlaug took the improved varieties to India and Pakistan
in the mid-1960s though scientists then thought those nations of explosive
populations and poor land were a hopeless cause.
But the effort worked. When Borlaug's work began there, India produced
11 million metric tons per year. That country now is the world's second
largest producer of wheat and is expected to bring in 73 million tons this
year, according to the Indian Embassy in Washington, D.C.
Borlaug has continued to work globally, maintaining research in Mexico
each spring and teaching at Texas A&M each fall.
"It's difficult to come back to the United States and talk about food
shortages when we have been blessed throughout history with abundance,"
Borlaug recalls.
The Congressional Gold Medal is the highest civilian award given by the
legislative branch of government, bestowed on those who have made a
significant "act of service to the security, prosperity, and national
interest of the United States."
George Washington was the first recipient on March 25, 1776. Borlaug
also joins the ranks of the Wright Brothers, Charles Lindbergh, Thomas
Edison, Dr. Jonas Salk, Mother Theresa of India, and Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. and Coretta Scott King and more than 100 other recipients.
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