) - i i 1 ! r I; p i i i n l J ft J I. V r t 1 UcsliKn Partly cloudy end warmer tocisy with light winds end a hlc,h of 73 (23C). Warm tonisht with a low cf 43 (SC). Psrtiy cloudy end warm cjpln on Friday with a high of 74 (23C). cjQD got o 1 K ,tor..HTho Mag rat 61 mUO. c5ay8...Page 14 0 -'- to maintain The Nebraska Union Board voted Tuesday to kill a motion tint would have extended union he-rs during finds week. The motion failed because cf lack of student -Interest &nd the belief that extending the union's hours wodd waste student fees, ssid board member Frank Kuhn. In'the past, union-hoars have been extended . beyond the regular 11 p.m. closing time. Ey 1 a.n., tragic la the union had died dcv.n and by 1:39 a.m. "there was hardly anyone left in the union," Kuhn said. 1 . In other business, the board discussed recruit Kent cf at-lsrgo members for this summer and the fa!MS5 semester through an informal epplication process. The board will have a formal process b the f:Il. ' Newly-elected vice president list Edens said : recruits aren't expected to make say commit-. For more information, call Edens cr newly-' fleeted beard president Missy Huckfddt la the Iff 111 have been proposed, End the board will vote April 23 to determine the d'oeatienj. i, i 1 t t Hi i ... ? i eritiri c el fc-sSicaT -xl:;2 Eibr. cf Iiiccla. . Erartet7Crw ehe desltaed iad msaisf&ctoed. For more on . Ya& mm&e cf Cax'ters swfca sad. gportewear, Eacr Q2 Bsrfcsra, sas ps 10. For more is&te coctare,, see Aanimistrator says iuxicans must learn iooa tecnnoiogies Chinese, U.S. scientists to study farm emiditions By Eric D "A hungry child knows no politics." With this idea in nfrd. Julia Chesg Biooh, assistant administrator of the U.S. Food for Pesee 'n the Agency for International Development, ssld the U.S. government will contribute more than $1 billion v;erth of aid to ftmine stricken Africa in Eloch speke at the Nebraska Union on the African food crisis. "Food sld slone csnnot soke Afri ca's food emerienc-y,1" Bloch said, steeississ thai A&iem countries must increase fsod self-reliszte through -J 1. t fif A m .-f " 1 lWrfSf'l?'?.' builsut 1323 cf cjrTcrfits tscSmocfy , A -sip f .-4 t-a 'v" "T f I Tha Urited tstes nes(h to maka policy charges in iti actions tsxard African countries to help reduce their reliance on foreip aid, she said. Food aid is partially used to cushion the impact these changes M11 have on fam ine victims. Bloch denied charges that the Rea gan administration was deliberately slow in getting food aid to Etiy 'We did not know the magnitude the problem until probably September" of last year, she said. The United States could not respond automatically to fee food crisis because, Koch said, the food aid chain is an extremely long and tortuous road of IcticsS, fensncial and orgsnkational problems. The Uni ted States did not wast to send tmi to a coimtry end hivo it rot cn the docks beea239 tkQ were no tracks to teas port it into r.te'fy ertrs. Feed eld b : r.:rd dr:s:i't have the p ricri ty thit it f..-jid ih b uli, main;? fcr o"f f orders di media has done a good job cf bringing the African food crisis to the attention of U.S. citizens, she said. But, Bloch said, the "ordinary Amer ican" doesn't understand the real causes of the crisis. Many reasons extending beyond the drought have caused it, she said. African governments have given low priority to agriculture. Many have fol- . lowed policies that subsidize food for j urban poor but have done nothing to ' help the small farmer with production, j Africa has suffered from an environ-f '. mental deradttion, including sell era- sien, deforestation and the destruction j cf trees for firewood, she said. '.. . Africa tes not benefited from the miracle seeds d the "fjreen revolution" n Euany Asiai caunde3 hive, t"$ the- :t cm meet Afdct's cy-br.d farming; r.e 3 Efil UNL will lead a joint study by the People's Republic cf China and the United States to compare the climate and agriculture of the North China Plain and the North American Great Plains. Norm Rosenberg, program coordina tor and director of the UNL Center for Agricultural Meteorology and Clima tology, said the program's goal is to help increase and stabilize food and fiber production in the North China Plain and the North American Great Plains. The two areas are similar in . climate, soils and crops, Rosenborg said. "'.'.'. Eosenberg went to China in ISS1 to see agricultural and meteorological research stations. It was proposed that Chinese and U.S. scientists collaborate on a program to explore productivity in' the two plains regions. . The U.S. National Oceanic and ' Atmospheric Administration and the U.S. National Science Foundation were enthusiastic. The NOAA and the State Meteorology Administration of China signed an agreement in 1881. Five possible projects have been identified for the plains study: O Physical climatology; O Measurement of insulation and photosynthetically active radiation; Agricultural microclimatoiogical measurements for comparing produc tion functions and water-use efficien cies; Understanding moisture stress and drought; -. O' -Ecological changes and poten tial plains productivity. 9 . ' The Chinese ere especially inter ested in the control of wind and water erosion, drought management, the uses of windbreaks and irrigation schedul ing, he said. . UNL wants to test some dines techniques - for inter-cropping and multidrop ping, he said. . - hi H J '4 i.J J 11