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Aggies for Barton TUESDAY 7:00 pm 206 MSC Congressman Joe Barton will be speaking on the 1988 election Register to vote In conjunction with: Aggie GOP Victory ’88 Young Conservatives For More Information Call Wade Witt 774-0091 Page 6/The BattalionTuesday, September 20, 1988 Knowledge, understanding needed for cultivating tropit PI By Melanie Heldt Reporter Attempts by the Western world to cultivate land in the tropical regions often have failed because of a lack of knowledge about tropical ecosystems and a misunderstanding of the dif ferent cultures represented in the tropics, Dr. Anthony Juo, professor of agronomy at Texas A&M, said. At a slide presentation and ques tion and answer session hosted by the International Development Fo rum, Juo shared some of his experi ences and insights gained through his work with the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research. CGIAR is an organization whose objective is to increase the quantity and improve the quality of food pro duction in developing countries. Juo worked with the group in Nigeria for 14 years. Juo cited many different reasons for low crop yields in the tropical re gions of Africa, Asia and Latin America. Poor land resources, soil erosion, insufficient rainfall, lack of irriga tion and overpopulation are among the different problems that inhabit ants in tropical regions face. To solve these problems, Juo felt re searchers and scientists should con sider three things. “You must know the physical and biological environment you are deal ing with,” he said. “Secondly, you must respect and utilize other peo ple’s cultures. Thirdly, technology, science and education are the only solutions to other people’s prob lems.” As an example of how much dam age can be done when scientists and farmers do not understand different ecosystems, Juo told a story about a group that went into the Amazon and cleared a large tracu;j| make room for a farm, Tm iailed because the groujfl take into account thefj ecosystem of that region. I' Problems can also arise Ji, ecosystem is understood,bjB turc ol the people is not. 1 “We must respect otlieiB cultures,” Juo said. “IVlitB into a place, stay three and then leave — it mated tied — not them.” Juo said he feels dial proach to solving agricultiij terns in the future willbea] tegrated global elfort. “We have to think morej in ecological terms,”hesai do not set a limit on whaiv will lx* putting moreandn sure on the environment] sources are limited, andei| we could upset thebalante DR. G OLD C MET£f CAN coot COIN OUT Storm aftermath leaves damages in $35 million range SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Torna does spawned by Hurricane Gilbert caused more than $35 million dam age in this South Texas city, which remained in a state of emergency Monday while residents cleaned up the mess. Two people were killed in the 41 tornadoes that leap-frogged through the state. Heavy rain swelled rivers in some areas, but no injuries were reported. Gov. Bill Clements was scheduled to tour the tornado-ravaged areas of San Antonio Monday afternoon af ter viewing damage in Brownsville on the southern tip of Texas. “I don’t think we are expecting much more in the way of trouble from Hurricane Gilbert,” Laureen Chernow, spokesman for the state's Emergency Management Council in Austin, said Monday. The storm system was moving through the midwest to Illinois, leav ing heavy rainfall in its wake. As Texans dug out from the tor nadoes, San Antonio Mayor Henry Cisneros, who toured tornado-rav aged areas on Sunday, said he wanted to extend his state of emer gency declaration through Friday. The declaration will enable the city to try to seek assistance from the Small Business Administration and other federal agencies. “I don’t want to deny anyone po tential help,” Cisneros said. Twisters that raged through a res idential area in the border town of Del Rio caused an estimated $ 1 mil lion damage, but no injuries late Sat urday, officials said. In Corpus Christi, two beaches in county parks were closed after they sustained about $100,000 damage, Nueces County Commissioner J.P. Luby said. “The foredunes were extensively damaged,” he said. “The tide went in and melted them away like but ter.” “/ don’t think we are ex pecting much more in the way of trouble from 11 Ul rica ne Gilbert. ” — Lauren Ghcrnow, spokesman for the state’s Emergency Ufanagement Council in Austin Foredunes along the beach pro tect larger dunes on the island’s inte rior from erosion. Luby, who said he would seek fed eral assistance in the park cleanup effort, said county jail inmates will be helping to clean up timber and other debris and repair damage to the foredunes and parking lots. But San Antonio, which opened up shelters for Gulf Coast residents fleeing the pending storm, seemed to have suffered the worst damage. One man was killed Friday when a utility pole struck his house and 59- year-old Emily Dickens was thrown from her mobile home after a twister struck her bedroom. The storm system then spawned a tornado that cut a path through Kelly Air Force Base, causing $3 mil lion damage to 12 buildings and an other $25 million to aircraft parts. Clements ti highlights storm dam BROWNSVILLE (AP)J Bill Clements on Mondatj the county he dedareth;! saster area from Huma belt, and said the souther: the state was fortunates missed the brunt of iht storm. “I think that all of w sense of relief that weartl that there is no more da l exas and more particular in C iameron County ik have experienced,"Ckma alter flying over South! land and the Brownsti Channel. Clements met Month ' cal officials in Brownstiik cuss the disaster dedarc Cameron County and us ‘ no ! c apartment complex whe ® an< nado spawned bvGilbetti Onl Another tornado then destroyed the air-conditioning system at the Veterans Administration Hospital, causing $2 million damage and prompting Cisneros to issue the emergency decree so equipment could be flown in and to avoid mov ing some 700 patients. Another tornado struck 1 he Lodge apartments, destroying about 120 units, damaging 204 others and leaving 300 homeless. g° percer ratio of his ^mvouid In o spawn* , r n Friday The governor thenlffil Antonio, where two pete- reported killed bv the area Friday and Sam r ®iis At least If tornadoes* jKsrted in Texas resultin; the hurricane, which ashore FwAav Mexico 120 miles soi Brownsville. The governor's disastti ration on Saturday clears way for a formal request for the* county throughtk eral Emergency Manas Agency. 11 may Ik* the end ofik Ik' l ore f ederal of ficials he seek emergency assistance county, Edd Hargett, rep rector of FEMA, said. Clements said the most sive damage he observed the air was to Park Road South Padre Island. “The only other counqi think will probably fall is situation of declaring as gency, and that is justapa ity, would be Bexar Count Antonio),’’ Clements said DEI i: tionar books, is not; guists guage An at the Heath £oncei “I k on the las Tii N£1 ee M assioi ornpe dther most c iia G as fot Abe stands faces the go langu; that h all an priori! Aft, pmg n memb create guage woma The shatta miles BigTl The Power Hitter. Hyundai’s Super-286C gives you pro-quality performance at an affordable price. ♦ 80286 Microprocessor, 8 or 10 mHz ♦ 1 .2ml) Floppy Drive ♦ 640K RAM (Expandable to IBM) ♦ Serial, Parallel, Clock Calendar ♦ EGA Graphics Card ♦ 101 Key Keyboard ♦ MS DOS, GW Basic ♦ 18 Month Warranty $1196 w/Monochrome Monitor $1496 w/EGA Monitor COMPUTER ACCESS has served the Brazos Valley for over four years. We offer sales and full technical sop? for IBM compatibles. 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