National Ag Risk Education Library Search Results Document Location http//www.ext.colostate.edu/pubs/farmmgt/03757.html Cooperative extension service, University of alaska, Fairbanks, Jul 2001, http://www.agrisk.umn.edu/Library/Results_Topics.asp?Keywords=Financing; debt re
Extractions: Department of the Interior This alphabetical list contains the names and Internet addresses of many agencies or organizations collecting environmental information within the Cook Inlet Basin. The list is not exhaustive; the intent is to provide sites having digital data or project descriptions as starting points for additional data searches. Placement of these links on this page does not imply endorsement or maintenance of these sites by the U.S. Government but is intended for information purposes only. The Internet address information in the list was collected in January 1999 and checked most recently 10 June 2003, but addresses occasionally change. If you have trouble accessing a site using the published address, try typing the name of the organization into an Internet search engine.
News-Miner - Past News Updated news stories for Fairbanks, alaska, Fairbanks, and the alaskan region . alaska wild berries are available at www.uaf.edu/coopext or by calling http://www.news-miner.com/Stories/0,1413,113~7244~2966477,00.html
Extractions: EMAIL ARTICLE LINK TO ARTICLE PRINT ARTICLE Article Published: Friday, July 15, 2005 Blueberry bliss arrives early By MARY BETH SMETZER , Staff Writer Blueberry bliss, an annual summertime malady, is running rampant among outdoor foragers a few weeks earlier than usual. "They're big and they're juicy, and they're wonderful," said Helenmarie Matesi, aka the "Berry Lady," with the Tanana District Alaska Cooperative Extension Service. "I suspect up in the hills it is a canopy of blue," Matesi said. She hasn't checked out all her favorite picking spots yet. Before the season is over, Jeff Wool, owner of Hot Licks Homemade Ice Cream, expects to buy close to 2,000 pounds of Alaska blueberries to satisfy Alaskans' taste for blueberry ice cream from local pickers. "We've been buying lots of berries already," Wool said. "I was surprised when I got the first call so early."
2005 ESP Chapter Presidents Delaware SUSAN TRUEHARTGAREY coop ext 69 Transportation Circle Dover, Director Purdue cooperative extension service 228 Second Street Aurora, http://espnational.org/chptpres.htm
Extractions: S ALPHA PI - Alabama REBECCA DOLLMAN State LeaderProgram Development 217 Dawson Hall P.O. Box 1088 Normal, AL 35762-1088 Phone: 256-372-4976 Fax: 256-372-5734 E-Mail: rdollman@aces.edu W ALPHA GAMMA - Alaska HOLLIS HALL 3511 Kreb Drive Fairbanks, AK 99709 Phone: 907-479-0617 Fax: E-Mail: hdhall@alaska.net W KAPPA - Arizona MATT LIVINGSTON P.O. Box 1203 Keams Canyon, AZ 86034-1203 Phone: 928-734-3708 Fax: 928-738-2360 E-Mail: mateo@cals.arizona.edu S ALPHA IOTA - Arkansas REBECCA MC PEAKE UA-CES P.O. Box 391 Little Rock, AR 72015 Phone: 501-671-2285 Fax: 501-671-2110 E-Mail: rmcpeake@uaex.edu W ZETA - Colorado KIPP NYE County Director; Agriculture / 4-H Youth Development P.O. Box 128 Simia, CO 80835-0128 Phone: 719-541-2361 Fax: 719-541-2982 E-Mail: kipp.nye@colostate.edu NE ALPHA CHI - Connecticut MARY ELLEN WELCH Extension Educator, Family and Consumer Middlesex County Extension Center 1066 Saybrook Rd., Box 70 Haddam, CT 06438-0070 Phone: 860-345-4511 Fax: 860-345-3357 E-Mail: mary.welch@uconn.edu
Selected Publications EB 1599, coop. ext., Washington State Univ., Pullman, Aug. 2000. Exvessel PriceDetermination in the alaska King Crab Fishery A Formula Price Contract http://www.ses.wsu.edu/People/publica.html
CSREES - USDA - Land-Grant University Contacts alaska Dr. Sheryl Stanek ext. Home Economics Program alaska Cooperative extension Director , ext. Family Programs Cooperative extension service http://www.csrees.usda.gov/nea/family/res/family_res_contacts.html
Community Nutrition Action Program State Contacts alaska. Dr. Bret Luick Food Nutrition Specialist alaska cooperative extension Nutrition Specialist coop. ext. 5717 Corbett Hall, Room 300 http://schoolmeals.nal.usda.gov/Training/states.html
Alaska Cooperative Extension Service Cooperative Extension service is the community outreach program for the Collegeof Rural alaska at the University of alaska Fairbanks. http://www.uaf.edu/ces/
Extractions: @import url(protostyles.css); If you can see this, your browser is not style sheet compliant. You should still be able to view the content and access the links, but to get the full experience, please download the latest browsers. Message from the Director Calendar of Events Publications Home Economics State Offices District Offices Staff Directories Employment with CES ... 75th Anniversary! The Cooperative Extension Service Mission is to interpret and extend relevant research-based knowledge in an understandable and usable form; and to encourage the application of this knowledge to solve the problems and meet the challenges that face the people of Alaska. The Cooperative Extension Service is an outreach educational delivery system supported by a partnership between the United States Department of Agriculture and the University of Alaska Fairbanks and College of Rural and Community Development. Potato Blight: Late blight is a plant disease that spreads quickly in wet weather. Caused by a water mold, a fungus-like microorganism named Phytophthora infestans, late blight spores can be carried several miles by wind. When spores land on wet leaves of potatoes or tomatoes, the microorganism can grow on the plant, making brown wet rot. The fact sheet "Late Blight Disease of Potato and Tomato in Alaska" provides additional information.
CES CYF Network Human Resources Database Institution, University of alaska Cooperative ext. Address, alaska Cooperativeextension Palmer Research Center 533 E. Fireweed Avenu Palmer, AK 99645 http://www.cyfernet.org/profdata/fullrecord.asp?humresID=103
Extension Network North Carolina Cooperative Extension Department of Family and Consumer Sciences alaska University of alaskaFairbanks Cooperative Extension service http://www.fcs.uga.edu/extension/housing/estar/estarnetwork.html
Natural Resources Extension Professionals Conference Chris Waddill, Dean and Director, Florida Cooperative Extension service, Harmful Algal Bloom Outreach in alaska A Public service Mission to Protect http://conference.ifas.ufl.edu/nrep/
Extractions: The Cooperative Extension Service was established to provide a non-traditional approach of applying research knowledge to help resolve community issues. Extension has developed a strong tradition and an excellent reputation for serving the same clientele base extremely well. However, this tradition is now preventing Extension from effectively addressing many other issues that have emerged during the past century. The theme to be explored during this conference is whether another rapid (revolutionary) or a more gradual (evolutionary) rate of change should occur to make Extension more relevant in todays communities and the role of natural resource extension programming in this revision. Who Should Attend Natural resource extension professionals and those who work with or would like to partner with these educators in environmental education, fisheries, wildlife, range, forestry, forest products, toxicology, ecotourism, water conservation and quality, sea grant, public policy, nature interpretation, watershed planning, ecological economics, rural development and other related disciplines. The primary audience consists of three groups: 1) Extension personnel at state 1862, 1890 and 1994 Land Grant Institutions (county faculty, county directors, district directors, specialists, department chairs, state program leaders and state directors); 2) National program leaders, and other staff with the USDA Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service; 3) Natural resource educators from other governmental agencies and private not-for-profit organizations.
Community Outreach Programs 4792261, ext. 115. School-Business Partnerships, This cooperative program Literacy Council of alaska (LCA), Services include an after-school tutoring http://www.northstar.k12.ak.us/parent/outreach.html
Extractions: Cooperative Education This course for students in grades 11 and 12 combines classroom instruction on work force readiness with paid on-the-job work experience. Businesses provide the opportunity for training and pay the student's salary. Ted Baxter, #479-2261 Community Resource Coordinators These part-time school-based coordinators encourage and support parent and community involvement by facilitating meaningful activities involving students, staff members, parents, and community members. Call your home school to find the name of your CRC. Community Education This program offers a wide range of K-12 enrichment opportunities and after-school activities for youth, families and adults. In addition to scheduling and organizing classes and workshops, the program aims to increase interagency cooperation, promote life-long learning, and facilitate public access to school buildings. Fairbanks Council of PTA'S The CPTA consists of representatives from each school Parent Teacher Association (PTA). These representatives elect a Board of Directors for the Council, which in turn serves as a resource for individual school PTAs and as a unified voice to identify and address districtwide and statewide educational issues.
Extractions: HEAD START BUREAU Grants In FY 1996, the American Indian Head Start Program network funded 130 grantees totaling $98 million. These grantees are located in 25 states and represent the following tribes, villages and towns: In FY 1996, there were 18,858 children enrolled in the American Indian Programs Branch Head Start Programs. The American Indian Head Start program staff totaled 3,965 for School Year 95-96. The Indian network has 487 centers and 919 classrooms. The Head Start Bureau provided $1.5 million in FY 1996 resources to four Tribal Governments to operate Parent Child Centers. Earlier this year, the Bureau funded two Early Head Start programs which serve pregnant women, infants, and toddlers (ages birth to three years) and we expect to fund 5 additional programs later this year. Eight tribes are funded to implement Substance Abuse programs for Head Start families. The Navajo Nation has a major Transition Grant from the Head Start Bureau to facilitate the transition of Head Start children to the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) and public schools. Other Transition activities are funded with the Crow Tribe, Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians and the Seminole Tribe of Oklahoma. Soon the Head Start Bureau, in collaboration with the Administration on Native Americans, will fund two native language projects.
Communications Office - Weekly Report - July 8, 2004 Moore is being honored for her 36 years of service as an NWS Cooperative Observer . Two NWS IMETs and one IMET trainee have been dispatched to alaska. http://www.nws.noaa.gov/com/weekly/wk070804.htm
Extractions: NWS Input to NOAA's Weekly Report - July 8, 2004 HOT ISSUES I. KEY DEPARTMENT NEWS The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA's) National Weather Service (NWS) Forecast Office in Spokane, WA, to Present Holm Award. All of the following italicized items will appear in the internal NWS version of the weekly report ONLY. They will not be forwarded to NOAA. NOAA's National Weather Service (NWS) Dispatches Incident Meteorologists (IMETs) to Alaska Fires. As of 8:00 a.m. ADT on July 8, 2004, 2.1 million acres have burned in Alaska since June 13-14, when a record setting number of lightning strikes affected much of the interior of Alaska. There are currently 73 active fires, with a total of 1,682 personnel spread among 20 of those fires. Two NWS IMETs and one IMET trainee have been dispatched to Alaska. NWS IMETs assist in efforts to combat wildfires that rage annually across the Nation. IMETs are a small group of experienced fire weather forecasters (54 certified nationwide) who are sent to locations throughout the U.S. to support wildfire operations and help support the safety of the fire fighters. Another NWS IMET will likely be dispatched early next week. Weather conditions for the remainder of the week indicate dryer and warmer weather with a potential for new fire starts from lightning strikes later this week. (Contact: Laura Furgione, W/AR, 907-271-5136) NOAA's Tropical Prediction Center To Give Tour and Briefing to International Red Cross Societies.
FSCPE Contacts Mr. William Tillman, Jr. (E,P) (919) 7337061 ext. 279 Office of State Budgetand Management Wisconsin Department of Health and Family Services http://www.census.gov/population/www/coop/coop.html
NNCO Members alaska Lou McClean State 4H Program alaska Cooperative Extension University ofMinnesota Extension service 475 Coffey Hall St. Paul, MN 55108-6068 http://crs.uvm.edu/nnco/collab/roster2.html
CSREES - USDA - Urban Program Resources CSREES, Cooperative State Research, Education, and extension service Mississippi State University extension service virgilc@ext.msstate.edu. Missouri http://www.csrees.usda.gov/nea/family/part/urban_part_contacts.html