Students go home to help family farm HARVEST from page 1 Potential fanners, regardless of where they grew up, should help with harvest, he said. The 12 to 14-hour days will help students decide if they are cut out for farming. “Farming is a long-term commit ment” because of the expense of land and equipment, Paczosa said. “You should ask yourself, ‘Do I want to be doing this for the next 30 or 40 years?’” he said. Scott Kloke, a senior in animal sci ence and agribusiness, said helping his family with harvest was a practical education, necessary for any agricul ture student. Those who have not worked dur ing harvest are “at a very distinct dis advantage,” Kloke said. Professors on East Campus know this, he said, and work with students who must skip class occasionally to help with harvest. “Most teachers on East Campus are a little bit more understanding than those on City Campus,” he said. “They know it’s almost critical that (students) do get home and help out.” Agriculture professors help stu dents by allowing them to take tests and complete homework early, he said. Kloke said he farms to help pay his tuition as well as to gain practical ex perience. This year’s good harvest should help him and his family, he said. Corn prices are dropping, but should remain above average in spite of high crop yields, Kloke said. Pfeiffer said last fall’s low crop yields kept com prices unusually high this summer. July and August prices hovered around $3.60 per bushel, he said. During summer months, farmers were concerned that this year’s crop could be another poor crop, Pfeiffer said. Instead, ideal growing conditions Farming's like driiP ing a car; you have to go out and learn. You can read all the books you want, but it jdoesn't do any good unless you get behindthe wheel." Tim Paczosa junior mechanized systems management major have set Nebraska for a record crop, and the market is responding. This means falling com prices, he said, hut prices should not fall too low. Prices still remain above average at $2.80 a bushel. Some fanning students and their families could be set to “make out like bandits,” he said. Many contracted their predicted fall crop to buyers at this summer’s high prices, Pfeiffer said. Contracting is when farmers sell their unharvested crop at high prices in an attempt to maximize profits. Because crop yields are high, most farmers should meet their contract commitments, he said. Only an extended period of rain or snow could threaten harvest now, he said. Soggy fields would stop com bines, and heavy snows could beat down com stalks. But milo fanners are hifPft 4JH little harsh weather, he said. Mild weather conditions have kept inilo growing andjgreen, when fanners would like to see their crops drying to %goldenbrown.t ^ ' V> % A hard freeze would help die dry ing process, Pfeiffer said. Afreeze, now would have negligible effects on cprn nculture predicted a l. 18^1&)t\bu^^ i com crop this yejar. That level would be 2 percent higher than the preyio&s i record crop in 1994,and38 percent higher than last year’s pdiGr harvest. If favorable, dry weath6r.contidifcs, soybean production also could be high ? — the second highest on record. %*■ - • Production is forecasted at a total Nebraska yield of 135.45 million bush els, 34 percent higher than last fall. " In another 21/2tofhree weeks, the 1 waiting, hard work and wondering will be over.Pfetffer sai£ Harvest wp will be Above: LOUIS PACZOSA evens out his father's load of corn Thursday before Louis and Tim took the load to the elevator to sell. Left: TIM PACZOSA unloads the corn. The elevator handles about 55,000bushels of com a day, and the high is 200,000 bushels a day during the rush. Photos by Matt Miller i I oor ice rink public use Renovations to the rink in the State Fair Park Coliseum began in April. Although the SB-mil lion renovation was fundedby the Stars’ own ers, Irv Dana III, Thomas Tegt and Kent - Reckewey, the state will still own the facility. Jim Mug, vice president of die Lincoln Stars, said the rink should open to the public later this month. The facility would be the first indoor ice rink in Lincoln. When plans for apractice rink for the USHL team were announced, Mug said, people ex pressed an interest in opening the rink to the public. . „ . The rink has to be 100-percent safe before it opens for public ice skating, he said. Carpet and matting still have to be installed, Pflug said, and the heating and air conditioning system has to be setat the correct level. „ Although hours and admission rates have not been set, Pflug said “making the rink economi cally, accessible” to the public was a primary &$ehher admission rates nor hours have been set Pnug said students would not get a reduced rate for admission or rentals, but he encouraged college groups to book the rink for parties and other events. “That’s one thing we want people to know — is that fraternities, sororities or any other group can look into this,” Pflug said. Pflug also said the public’s use of the rink would have an impact on the condition of the ice, but a correctable one. “It’ll take a share of abuse,” Pflug said. “But that’s just die trade off. One of the reasons we wanted to put a rink in Lincoln is so the public cpuld skate on it” I v - 3m mlm: ■ ■ jfeTHICS from page 1 that it was setbefore ASUN truly realized what was involved in the task. “Anyone that spehds time trying to draft a - document comes to the realization that if is . something that takes time,” Griesen said. “Eric is just learning with this new experience.” Marintzer said the delay was caused by a desire to get more input. ‘I’ve been talking to students and faculty,” he said. “I want this to be a document that ev ery * ts had a chance to have input on.” tzer plans to bring the code of ethics before the Presidential Roundtable on Oct. 29, and discuss it at an upcoming ASUN meeting. Another reason for slow progress on the code of ethics was concern to keep from “imposing morals” on students, Marintzer said. To avoid that, Marintzer said, he has been careful to ensure that die code of ethics was short and included broad wording. Griesen also said that specific wording can lead to problems. ' “I think that it’s important that we don’t have unreasonable expectations,” Griesen said. Marintzer said he hopes to have the code of ethics near completion by the middle or end of November. Griesen aaid he was much more concerned with the quality of the document and would not mind if it became a longer process. “I think I speak for myself and Chancellor Moeser in saying that we would really like to have a creed created that would be able to last for decades and decades,” Griesen said. - \ • ' * '