Tuesday, July 14, 1986 Daily Nebraskan Page 5 Letter Redistribution can't solve population problem The July 8 editorial in the Daily Nebraskan is an interesting response to the news that our world population has now passed the five billion mark. It seems very reassuring that our U.S. farmers' ability to feed people has doubled in the past 19 years (Feb. 1986, Econ. Res. Kept. U.S.D.A.). I agree that our present world food distribution should be greatly improved. It would certainly benefit our farmers. I would say we need to better distribute all resources. Incidentally, at the present growth rate the world population will double again in 35-46 years. Can the farmers double their productivity again by then? If the world food supply were fairly and equitably distributed we would have much less quantity and quality. China is doing just that with their available supplies. There is a marked absence of the famines which just thirty years ago were a regular part of the news from China. We naturally applaud the better nourishment of the general popoulation of China (and the fact that they buy Nebraska grain), but usually fail to notice that the few for merly affluent Chinese people now get their small allotment of meat along with everyone else. However, in the meantime the world population has continued its inexora ble course. There is a formula for calcu lating the world population at any given date, developed by some statisti cians, published in Science (Vol. 132, p. 1290 in 1960). For the mathemati cally inclined the formula is: N(pop- ulation)(1.79xl0")(2026.87-t).99.The letter "t" in the formula may be any given date. There are several interesting things about this formula. One is that it calcu lates the population of the world for 1492 as 350 million (roughly 100 mil lion more than the present U.S. popula tion). Another interesting thing about this formula is that during the year 2026 the figure in the divisor becomes zero. At this point the formula predicts the population will become infinitely large. Obviously, we will not reach that point. If we even come close the best distribution plan will not serve our needs. Therefore, it is clear that within the lifetimes of the members of the present student body the population crisis will have arrived and the popula tion will have either leveled off or started to decline as rapidly as it rose. But wait, there is still one other inter esting item in connection with the formula. If we calculate when the pop ulation will reach 5 billion, we find that the formula predicts the population will reach that level in 1989. So the formula and I join the chorus of the "doom sayers." No matter how many people there are to produce more jobs and society's wealth, there is only a finite amount of resources on the earth. The population is more rapidly moving toward infinity than the statisticians determined. Where will it end? I firmly believe that the scenario to come will depend on what the present generation does, particularly the United States. The population rise will be checked either by famines, wars, massive plagues (is AIDS the beginning?) or there will be rational plans to distribute informa tion about ways to humanely limit the population while fairly distributing our resources to the people already here. The choice is with your generation. I am only sorry my generation failed to bring such plans to fruition. Earl B. Barnawell Associate Professor Biological Sciences Scms classes you tako as a patter of course. Scsne courses you take as a matter of class. 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His new "Solid arity Party" must run a full slate, but he does not want the pro forma candi dates of his party to take votes from regular Democrats, such as Sen. Alan Dixon. Stevenson smiles wanly as he says his woes have given him "millions of dollars worth of attention." However, but for the honor of it, he would as soon dispense with the attention he has received in the New York Times this morning. "There goes my money again," he says imagining the depressive effect of t he Times catalog of the misadventures during his recent foray into central Illinois. On his ill-timed visit to the University of Illinois he missed the class break and got only two signatures for his petition to get his party on the ballot. At a meeting of auto workers, when asked about owning a Japanese pickup truck, he said his farm is hurt ing, the truck saved him $1,500, but "If I had known I was running then, I wouldn't have done it." In politics, them that has has money, has momentum gits: gits money, momentum. Big Jim radiates energy and, says Stevenson, "has never in his life taken an unpopular posi tion." Of course, neither has Big Jim apologized for his pickup. Besides, there is a natural attrition in governing. Thompson's 10 years of governing have been 10 years of choos ing. Choosing means pleasing some people but aggravating others, and people have longer memories for aggra vations than pleasures. Furthermore, Stevenson, a representative of one of America's most distinguished political families, may now have an appealing kind of anti-charisma: stoicism in the face of unkind Fate. The contest may yet be a contest. 1986, Washington Post Writers Group Will is a Pulitzer prize-winning colum nist and a contributing editor to Newsweek. ( I m SgS M EPATTtDDCE ijj2f2 l PERSONAL HAIR DESIGN firSTSa ffiswAk ail La,;' fjgl1 1 1 l 7 " 477-5522 337 So. 9th Across from P.O. 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