Friday, October 21, 1033 PC"0 0 Dally Ncbrcskcn :ii2o-3H filaceo got conHfe' m - - X n 1 ' i ... rmt V n n r nr" "7 r- 7r - V - ...... V- m JkL . The following noncredit program will help you meet the challenge! of col lege: . Science of Efficient Study, Oct. 24, 7-9 p.m. CoIIcqs Survival for Adults, Oct. 24, 7-9 p.m. Reading Enhancement Workshop, Oct. 27, 7-9 p.m. GRE Review, Oct. 29, 8:30-1 1 :30 a.m. Math Anxiety Clinic, Nov. 3, 7-9 p.m. Building Writing Skills, Nov. 14, 7-9 p.m. All classes meet at the Nebraska Center, 33rd and Holdrege. Call 4721332 for dates, fees, and additional information. Sponsored by the UNL Division of Continuing Studies Department of Evening Programs and Adult Learning Ser vices. Academic advising and career counseling available. 500&tile I Campus UNL is a nondiscriminatory institution. The AGNET system is a university-based informa tion network that supplies rricultural data, by computer, to subscribers serosa the United States. . The new microcomputers were paid for with money from a matching fund set up by the univer sity, Emal said. The NU Foundation End the Insti tute of Agriculture and Natural Resources contrib uted money to the fund. County offices supplied 60 percent of the cost of the computers and the univer sity fund matched those amounts, he said. Leo Lucas, Dean and Director of the Nebraska Extension Service, said communication, word pro cessing, data storage, office management and deci sion aiding for clientele are the five functions of the computers in the extension oCces. The AGNET system is 3 available as ever," Lucas said. "This just makes it more usable." "The new technology allows us to make decisions closer to the point where the decisions should be made . . . and at a lower cost," Lucas said. " Nebraska's county extension offices recently have made some mcjor changes in the structure of their computer r;"t:r.3 to take advance of the new computer technologies. Since last summer, GS of the 85 county extension offices in the state have purchased microcompu ters, said Jim Emal, extension microcomputer spe cialist for.the UNL Cooperative Extension Sen-ice. Emal said the microcomputers allow each office to compute budgets, manage inventories and do word processing without tying up the computer phone lines. The microcomputers are replacing the "dumb" terminal computers used in the offices since the mid-19703, he said. These terminals had no comput ing capabilities of their own and had to be hooked up by telephone to the main frame computers and the AGNET system in the State Capitol Building in Lincoln. 5 A iti; PiiTOQTS SALOON Football Headquarters for IID Alums ftf) 'ten ct 9 ma tstf&i. kaV(a4 Anal A t4"9 f f 4-lejV $m3 i pxi. eclest freni cur &Jk M " Bret, 474-72X0 " f " r- - 1 ( cz. i v 11 1. Ih: . . v, . -J I Y 1 - v - - if ji .7 k , i . - i i V J i i i. , J L WITH CRISPY CHICKErj 70 STAY OH GO! V.'::t Vcn Ccrn , , V j' U k- V J' ,, . Students live, learn abroad By Sara Thomssssn Graduate work overseas is risky bus iness, but a UNL professor and two students who have done research in other parts of the world said they think the headaches were all worth while. "You are taking a chance in doing your graduate-student research over seas " said Joanne Loan, who did graduate research on grain sorghum in the Dominican Republic. "No irriga tion, insects and local animals can severely damage a seed plot." Logan explained that although these mishaps aba occur in the United States they are more apt to happen in less-developed countries. Logan spoke at a seminar Vednes day titled "A Year Abroad for the Graduate Student; A Living and Learn ing Experience." UNL students and professors offer a panel discussion t presentation on overseas research and study every few weeks in the East Union. The meetings are open to the public. Wednesday's seminar featured graduate students Logan and Susan Kaup, and Charles Francis, a UNL agronomy professor. Kaup studied protein quality in food products in Tunisia. She said although natives of the country were under standing and cooperative toward the research, they did not completely trust students. "In Tunisia, it's who you know " she said. "Everytime I wanted to see some one or something I had to go through my Tunisian professor because he had connections. He knew people." Francis studied in Columbia and the Philippines, with funding through the Rockefeller and Ford foundations. Francis cited several advantages to doing research in a different country. He said research is very relevant because the work involves solutions to real problems. The work is beneficial to the individual and to the country where the work is being done. Also, personal benefits like travel opportun ities and new cultural experiences make overseas study worthwhile, he However, there are disadvantages to over-seas study, too. Francis said it can cost between $15,000 and $20,000 to send a graduate student to study in a foreign country for a year. To send a staff member to another country, the cost can run anywhere from $45,000 to $G0,000 per year. Francis said it may take longer to make it through graduate school be cause of the difficulties in relocating. Sometimes the student misses intense contact with the graduate committee and peers. Depending on where the work is being done, libraries and com puting facilities also might be scarce. "If you want to put those on a bal ance " Francis said, "I think that the positive side far outweighs the nega tive side. I would not do it any other way if I had to do it over egain." 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