Energy Solutions powered electric plant at a wisconsin dairy farm; Wastes Colorado State Univ CoopExt factsheet on Biodiesel Market Environment News service article regarding http://www.es.wapa.gov/energy_solutions/res_list.cfm?category=Power Production&s
Energy Solutions powered electric plant at a wisconsin dairy farm; Wastes Colorado State Univ CoopExt factsheet on Solstice Internet information service of the Renewable http://www.es.wapa.gov/energy_solutions/res_list.cfm?category=Renewables&subcate
Turfgrass Pathology Links Guidelines Pests of Turfgrass UC Davis ext. Fairy Ring A Problem of TurfgrassCSUCoop extension; Fairy of Pink and Gray Snow Molds U of wisconsin-extension http://www.uoguelph.ca/GTI/links/relidx12
Extractions: Turfgrass Disease Images [U. of Guelph (Ontario)] Major Diseases of Turf Grasses in Western Canada [Alberta Agriculture, Food and Rural Development] Plant Diseases [Alberta Extension Docs] Diagnosing Common Lawn Diseases [University of Maryland] Maryland Turfgrass Disease Control Recommendations Disease-like Problems on Turfgrasses [NCSU TurfFiles] Diseases of Tall Fescue [NCSU TurfFiles] Diseases of Warm-Season Grasses [NCSU TurfFiles] Diseases of Turfgrass on Athletic Fields [NCSU TurfFiles] Diseases of Bentgrass [NSCU TurfFiles] Diseases of Turfgrass on Athletic Fields [North Carolina] Soil Fertility, pH and Diseases of Turfgrasses [IPM Alabama] Management of Turfgrass Pests [Ohio State Ext] Turf Tips [Purdue U.] Indiana] Managing Lawn Diseases [Purdue U.] Microscopic Identification Key for Turfgrass Diseases [University of Wisconsin-Maidson] Turfgrass Disease Diagnostic Laboratory [University of Wisconsin-Maidson] Molecular Methods for Identification of Turfgrass Pathogens [University of Wisconsin-Extension] Plant Health Services [University of Wisconsin-Madison] Plant Disease Management Information [Agri. Electronic Bulletin Board, Missouri]
Newsletter 4/6/2001 JD or LL.D with significant relevant industry or public service background. WisconsinCoop. ext., Sparta , WI Economic Development Agent, MS w/at least one http://www.econ.iastate.edu/newsletter/011003.html
Extractions: Ames IA January 10, 2003 ***GRADUATE STUDENT ANNOUNCEMENTS*** Copies of past micro and macro qualifying exams for graduate students are available in 178 Heady. Important dates/deadlines Friday, Jan. 17 - Last day to file an APPLICATION FOR GRADUATION (Diploma Slip) for Spring Semester. The form is available at http://www.grad-college.iastate.edu/deadline/formss.html ***TRAVEL AUTHORIZATIONS SUBMITTED*** Willie Meyers, Jan. 13-14 John Miranowski, Jan. 29-30 Peter Orazem, Jan. 14-22 ***ANNOUNCEMENTS*** College of Agriculture faculty and staff are encouraged to attend the college convocation on Jan. 16 in the Memorial Union Sun Room. College awards will be presented and recent retirees honored. A reception with refreshments will begin at 3:30 p.m. with the program at 4 p.m. Tom Fullerton, MS 1988, has been named to the Wells Fargo Bank Professorship by the Department of Economics and Finance at the University of Texas at El Paso “Frontiers in Agricultural Research: Food, Health, Environment and Communities" is a new report from the National Academies' Board on Agriculture and Natural Resources. The report reviews the USDA's Research, Education and Economics mission area, the main engine of publicly funded agricultural research.
Untitled Jerry Wade Univ. of Missouri wadeJ@missouri.edu. Jim Resick Univ. of Wisconsinjhresick@mail.wiscnet.net. Rod Howe Cornell coop. ext. rlh13@cce.cornell.edu. http://www.ag.ohio-state.edu/~edeco/cdoct98.html
Extractions: SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT CONFERENCE TO TAKE PLACE - The Ohio Alliance for the Environment is conducting a conference on Sustainable Communities...Are We Doing Enough? on November 4th and 5th, 1998 at the Concourse Hotel, Airport, Columbus. The program begins at 1:00 on the 4th , includes a dinner and keynote speaker, Ted Bernard, Professor at Ohio University and author of The Ecology of Hope, and runs the entire day on the 5th. The keynote address the second day will be given by Martin Spitzer, Executive Director of the President's Council on Sustainable Development. Throughout Ohio, business leaders, residents, elected and government officials are working to achieve a new type of prosperity based on sustainable development. This conference offers the opportunity to participate in a question and answer format with noted experts in this field and a chance to "roll up your sleeves" to work with specific topics through active group discussions. For further information, contact Dave Patton at phone 614-292-6618, FAX him at 614-292-7341 or e-mail him at patton.4@osu.edu or you may contact the District Office. REGIONAL WORKSHOPS ON LAND USE AND FARMLAND PROTECTION POLICY- Five regional training workshops on land use and farmland policy are targeted for OSU Extension, NRCS, and SWCD staff. The workshop of the East District will be held on Thursday, December 17, 1998 at the Pritchard-Laughlin Civic Center in Cambridge from 8:30 am to 4:30 pm. These workshops are being presented by American Farmland Trust in conjunction with OSU Extension and The Ohio State University, C. William Swank, Professor of Rural-Urban Policy.
University Of Wisconsin-Extension, Connecting You To Lifelong Learning Offers distance learning courses.Category Reference Education Institutions United States 03/17/03 wisconsin Public Television provides analysis on Iraqi situation 03/13/03Parents of new drivers can teach strategies for safety on the roads 03/8/03 http://www.uwex.edu/
House Finch "Eye" Disease, NF97-355 and how the extension service is going to address them. for the Cooperative Extension service." This report included the agencies, and the extension service has been involved from http://www.ianr.unl.edu/pubs/wildlife/nf355.htm
Extractions: John Dinan, Nongame Bird Program Manager, Nebraska Game and Parks Commission Previous Category Catalog Order Info A newly-recognized disease that causes swollen eyelids and weepy eyes in house finches was confirmed in Nebraska in 1996 and has been observed as far west as McCook. Other symptoms of this emerging disease include wet, matted feathers around the eyelids and face, weight loss, fluffed feathers, inactivity, loss of sight, and eventual death in some affected birds. This disease, caused by a strain of the bacteria-like organism Mycoplasma gallisepticum , was first observed in several mid-Atlantic and eastern states in 1994. It has now spread to Canada, all of the eastern and Midwestern United States, and as far west as Texas, but has not been reported in Colorado. Species Affected This disease does not affect people, cats, dogs or other mammals, and the house finch appears to be the primary host. Natural infections, however, have been confirmed in a few American goldfinches, and one report indicates that two young blue jays developed the disease after being placed in a cage previously occupied by infected house finches. Another strain of mycoplasma causes respiratory disease in domestic poultry. In laboratory situations, chickens can become infected with the finch strain of mycoplasma, but may not develop the same illness as the house finch. No naturally occurring cross-infection has been reported between house finches and poultry.