The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, August 29, 1983, Page Page 11, Image 11

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    Monday, August 29, 1933
Daily Nebraskan
Page 11
Crop damage
Continued from Page 1
"I was only seven or eight years old
and I can remember waking up and
looking out the window. All I saw on
the ground were drifts of red dust that
had blown up from Oklahoma," he
said.
Lemke said he also grows soybeans,
wheat, milo and alfalfa.- He said his
soybean production will be down this
year and his milo production will be
half the amount it was iast year. But
Lemke said his participation in the
payment-in-kind program and a good
wheat yield will offset the financial loss
from his crop damage.
Lemke said a good yield for all of his
crops might net around 80 to 90
bushels per acre but he said he expects
only 30 bushels this year.
Tor the past three years my crop
production has been going down, and
financially, things have been a litte
tough " he said. The high cost of oper
ation is getting to me."
Most of Lem ike's concern stems from
the severe shortage of topsoil and sub
soil moisture in his fields. Bill Dobbs,
statistician for the Nebraska Crop and
Livestock Reporting Service, said top
soil moisture in Nebraska was rated as
10 percent short and subsoil moisture
was 71 percent short.
Dobbs said the dryland corn in sou
theastern Nebraska looks bad, but
added that the state as a whole will
come out fairly well.
"The good crop productions in nor
theast Nebraska will offset the crop
loss figures in the southeast part of the
state," he said.
"There are some (wheat) farmers
reporting a total corn crop loss," Dobbs
said, "but the good wheat yields are
making up for the below-average
yields overall."
The condition of combined dryland
and irrigat ed corn in Nebraska before
last week's rains was rated as 13 per
cent, poor; 25 percent, fair; 61 percent,
good' and 1 percent, excellent.
Dobbs said nearly 40 percent of the
dryland crop was rated in poor condi
tion, while three-fourths of the irri
gated crop rated good. All of
sout heastern Nebraska's dryland corn
was listed in poor condition.
"The rain will give the corn a
breather, but the main help will be for
the soybeans and sorghum," he said.
Sorghum conditions in the state
were rated as 38 percent, poor; 46 per
cent, fair; and 16 percent, good. The
state's soybeans were rated as 19 per
cent, poor; 59 percent, fair; 21 percent,
good; and 1 percent, excellent, Dobbs
said.
Dobbs said soybeans can still make a
fairly good harvest if sufficient rain
falls in the next few weeks.
"More rain is definitely needed," said
Dobbs. "Those soybean fields which
received two inches of rain in the last
10 days will need about two more
inches in the next two to three weeks."
Related stories on Page 14.
DONT LET AN ACCIDENT TRIP YOU UP
BUY KEYSTONE STUDENT INSURANCE
r-
Are you willing to gamble that you won't have any medical bills during the school
year?
Why not buy Student Health Insurance and decrease your odds for financial disaster
to illness or accident.
After October 15. 1S33 all enrollments are FINAL! Visit the Student Health Insurance
Office, Room 103 at the Health Center by Saturday, October 15th, A Student Insurance
Representative is available to answer your questions Monday through Friday.
For more information call 472-6000.
J V
mjDmT inuflflnce compRnv
P.O. Box 400 430
Dallas, Texas 75240
1-800-527-0519
Correction
5
In the financial aid story on page 48 of the Aug. 24
Daily Nebraskan, the name of the room where work
study assignments should be picked up was incor
rect. The assignments will be available from 8:30
a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. today through
Friday in the Office of Scholarships and Financial
Aid, Administration Building 113.
Welcome Back
Come take a
BEAUTY BREAK
with Ho viand's.
'i
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Come Discover Our New
Beauty Break Salon.
Before campus classes start, discover our
Beauty Break, the salon within a salon at
Hovland-Swanson. The Beauty Break
offers you a start-to-finish, terrific new
hairstyle, quality work at unbelievably
low prices.
Beauty Break, Third Floor, Hovland's Downtown
SPECIAL. FREE HAIRCUT
with any regularly priced shampoo ana
styling. $12 value. NOW $5.50.
(Also on sale, our deluxe salon perm
haircut and perm, reg. $34. NOW $18.)
Now through September 19
Stop by today or give us a call at
477-6921 or 477-9211
Appointments not always necessary.
hovland-swchson
i -j
IN' fc If 'Pi a If l1' ;f
ff
NBC Offers Students
Two Bank-In-The-Box Locations and a
Campus Money Center in the Nebraska Union.
:yjL)Vj j u Of iAhd
110x5
anW a mfcsM
Apply for your own Bank-ln-The-Box card at the
NBC Campus Money Center or at any NBC bank
location. It makes 24-hour banking
easy as NBC.
With two Bank-In-The-Box machines
and the NBC Campus Money Center, the
Nebraska Union is the perfect place to
get cash, make deposits, transfer funds
or cash checks. In fact, you can use your
Bank-In-The-Box card 24 hours a day at
the south entrance of the Nebraska
Union. If you need any other banking
services, NBC's main bank is just a few
blocks away.
We're mailing banking on campus easy
as
iv
Nebraska Union, City Campus, 14th & Ft Streets, Lincoln
Main Bank. 13th & O Parkway Drive-ln. Walk-In. 40th & South East Park Drive-In. Walk-In. 66tli & O Rampark Drive-In. Walk-In. 12th & P
MEMBER FDIC- Accounts Insured to $100,000 472-4321
One of the Commerce Group Banks f"f
serving Lincoln and Nebraska