Extractions: Click here for a printable Adobe Acrobat version (43Kb PDF file) Scholarship Program The College of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Natural Resources at North Dakota State University provides one of the best college-based scholarship programs in the Upper Midwest. Scholarships range from $100 to $2,000 per year. Some are renewable for up to four years, depending on the student's academic performance. The College selectively matches several of its scholarships for gifted incoming freshmen with scholarships administered by the Office of Admission. Funds for scholarships are provided by individuals, companies, foundations and organizations who are aware of the commitment a student must make to complete a college education. They established these scholarships to encourage students who are willing to make that commitment while enrolled in the College of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Natural Resources at NDSU. Scholarship recipients and donors are recognized at a luncheon held on campus each year. The scholarships and awards listed in this brochure are divided into two categories: College of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Natural Resources General Scholarships
NorthDakotaSIGsummary north dakota Abstract or Conceptual Framework for State Systemic Change SIG Partners will contribute significant inkind resources to accomplish the http://www.signetwork.org/New_SigNet/Docs/ND/NorthDakota.htm
Extractions: State Improvement Grant Applications Funded in 2000 North Dakota Abstract Basic Information Improvement Strategies Return to Main Page North Dakota Abstract or Conceptual Framework for State Systemic Change Through the systematic analysis of a wide range of needs assessment data, the North Dakota Department of Public Instruction and its State Improvement Grant (SIG) Partners have established three goals to improve the results for children and youth with disabilities. Goal 1: North Dakota will have the necessary personnel to ensure effective services for children and youth with disabilities. Goal 2: Preservice and professional development systems will build capacity of general education, special education, educational administration, and related services personnel and families to ensure quality education for all students in the least restrictive environment. Goal 3: Youth with disabilities will attain positive post-school results through consistent statewide transition planning and implementation. Goal 1 focuses on recruitment and retention of qualified special education and related services personnel in North Dakota, which ranks 49
Job Service North Dakota - Job Seekers Go to discovernd.com, the official site for north dakota State Government programs Partners in Parenting / West dakota Parent and family Resource Center http://www.sharenetworknd.com/providerList.asp?letter=P
AgNIC - Other Resources Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York north Carolina northDakota Nursery and Landscape Commercial family Resource Management http://web1.msue.msu.edu/iac/agnic/lgrntlst/agnmain.html
Extractions: The links in this section are provided as a convenience to AgNIC users. The sites are primarily Land Grant University Extension Services and Agricultural Experiment Stations. The sites have not received in depth review and may, or may not meet AgNIC selection criteria. The sites are organized by subject and host state. Within each subject there may be several additional sub groups. You can view the list of subject groups and subgroups before making a selection. Click on the AgNIC logo to return to the AgNIC home page or use your browser's back button to return to the previous page. The data base that supports this listing is maintained by Michigan State University Extension. This version of the list was generated on 12/12/02
ACF - Programs general information about Federal programs serving children and families? REGION 8 DENVER Colorado, Montana, north dakota, South dakota, Utah, http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs.html
Extractions: Are you looking for information on how to get assistance for yourself, your family, or a friend? If so, you may find our Contacts page helpful in finding assistance near you. Are you looking for general information about Federal programs serving children and families? On this page you will find links to information on the programs overseen by the Administration for Children and Families (ACF). ACF oversees about 60 programs that provide funds to state, local, and tribal organizations, both public and private. ACF also has several partnership projects, Federal Committees, and clearinghouses that provide the public with a variety of resources. This page links to programs, regional offices , clearinghouses, committees, and special projects.
Extractions: The Center for Policy Alternatives is a "non-profit, non-partisan public policy and leadership development center devoted to community-based solutions that strengthen families and communities." Their web site offers a newsletter Alternatives , information on programs and campaigns, news releases on national and community issues, information on model legislation, and links to additional resources. Early Head Start National Resource Center@ ZERO TO THREE
A North Dakota Legislator's Guide To The ND Dept. Of Health The State Health Council serves as the north dakota Department of Health s The Health resources Section consists of three divisions Health Facilities http://www.health.state.nd.us/ndhd/pubs/legguide99/
Extractions: North Dakota Department of Health Overview Office of State Health Officer Deputy State Health Officer Administrative Support Section Emergency Preparedness and Response Section Health Resources Section Community Health Section Medical Services Section Environmental Health Section Local Public Health Units Employee Index Appendix
North Dakota State Genealogy Links - ND StateGenSites Here are the resources available for north dakota. north dakota Vital Records;north dakota Historical Societies; north dakota Cemeteries; north dakota http://www.genealogytoday.com/genealogy/states/north_dakota.html
Extractions: Getting Started Family History Research Tools Advanced Topics ... Members Area StateGenSites, launched on October 7, 1999, is one of the most popular directories for U.S. genealogy. Here are the resources available for North Dakota. North Dakota Vital Records North Dakota Historical Societies North Dakota Cemeteries North Dakota Census ... State Links for North Dakota For birth, marriage, divorce, and death records... Division of Vital Records Rules for ordering VitalChek for North Dakota Historical societies are a great resource when you are unable to visit the town of your ancestors. Many societies keep local records, photos and even information about cemeteries. Society Hill Directory In the summer of 1862, thousands had already died in the second summer of a terrible war that few believed would last more than several months. On July 17, Congress enacted legislation authorizing the President to purchase "cemetery grounds" to be used as national cemeteries "for soldiers who shall have died in the service of the country." Cemetery Junction
Extractions: DHS Home Contact DHS Skip Navigation Search: About DHS Services and Help Business Services Online Services ... Publications/Research Senator Holmberg, Chairman Chairman Holmberg, members of the Senate Appropriations Committee, I am Blaine Nordwall, Director of Economic Assistance Policy of the Department of Human Services. I am here today to provide you an overview of the budget area Economic Assistance. Economic Assistance Policy is responsible for eligibility policy for Basic Care Assistance and for all aspects of state level administration, including eligibility policy, of Child Care Assistance, Energy Assistance, Food Stamps, and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (including the Job Opportunities and Basic Skills program). This work involves: Distributing benefits to recipients Directing and supervising county social service board administration of EAP programs Implementing all applicable state and federal law Providing training, written instructions, and interpretations concerning program requirements
Stateresources and brings resources to bear to strengthen needy children, families, north dakota State University PO Box 5636 Fargo, ND 58202 Ph 701231-7980 http://www.childadvocate.net/stateresources.htm
Child Support Forms By State - Findlaw For The Public - Mediation and family Court Forms (Kentucky Court of Justice) Child SupportGuidelines Worksheet PDF (north dakota Department of Human Services) http://print.family.findlaw.com/child-support/support-help/state-child-support-f
Extractions: http://public.findlaw.com Saturday, Sep. 24, 2005 Below you will find links to state-specific child support forms. To suggest a resource for this page, please e-mail us Alabama Kentucky North Dakota ... Wyoming A C Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado All Family Law forms (Colorado Judicial Branch) Connecticut Back to Menu D F G H Delaware Support Law Forms (Delaware State Courts) Petition for Support [PDF] Rules of Support [PDF] Child Support Calculation Instructions [PDF] Petition for Accounting of Support [PDF]
Recipients Ripley County family Services Riverview Hosptial Safe House north Vernon Holy family Hospital Lawrence general Hospital Lowell general Hospital http://www.newbornsinneed.org/html/recipients.html
Extractions: office@newbornsinneed.org Need help finding things on our website? Click here and well assist you! Newborns in Need (NIN) is proud to be able to provide premature and full term babies with much needed clothing and blankets by working with over 400 facilities across the United States. The information here represents a portion of facilities given donations. NIN home office provides donations to areas who dont have a chapter yet. If you would like to start a chapter to meet your communitys needs, please email office@newbornsinneed.org for more information after reading all of our website and becoming familiarized with the START A CHAPTER information. Together we can make a difference in the lives of tiny babies in all communities across the United States. One person CAN make a difference - it is YOU? Alabama
Extractions: Home Page Why New Rules? Get our e-Bulletins Rules Index ... Contact Us Amendment E was passed via referendum in November 1998 with 59 percent of the vote. It was backed by more than two-thirds of farmers and received significant support from South Dakota's urban centers. Amendment E joined Nebraska's Initiative 300 as one of the strictest measures of its kind in the nation. Not only were corporations forbidden from owning or controlling farmland, but the practice of of companies paying farmers to raise crops or livestock on their behalf was also prohibited. This practice, known as "contract feeding," was permissible through a loophole in the old anti-corporate farming law, passed by the state legislature in 1988. Amendment E also disallowed structures such as limited liability corporations and partnerships in which farmers join together to limit their financial liability. South Dakota's Constitutional Amendment E was ruled unconstitutional on August 19, 2003 by the U.S. 8th Circuit Court of Appeals in St. Louis, MO. The appellate court found the law that South Dakota voters put in place in 1998 to be in violation of the Interstate Commerce Clause. "I'm very disappointed with this decision," said DRA FARM team leader, Charlie Johnson, "but the fact remains that the voters of South Dakota have chosen family farms over corporate factory farms three times since 1974. While the 8th Circuit Appellate Court has shown total disregard for the wishes of South Dakota's citizens, I am encouraged by the knowledge of the broad support we have for this issue at home," said Johnson.
VirtualTourist.com - North Dakota Tips - Pictures, Tips And Reviews north dakota general Tips. Local time 808 am Saturday, August 6, 2005. north dakota Hotel C Mon Inn in Grand Forks Fargo Ideal for families and http://www.virtualtourist.com/travel/North_America/United_States_of_America/Nort
Extractions: In the Badlands of western North Dakota I saw a colony of prairie dogs beside the highway and decided to take a hike across the prairie through their "town". My presence frightened the barking rodents, so I was unable to get a good photo of them. However, about a quarter-mile from the highway I topped a small rise and saw this maginificant bull bison. I quickly took this photo and backed away. If he had come my way there would have been nowhere for me to hide except down a prairie dog hole, and I don't think I would have fit. North Dakota Wildlife: Then and Now
NRDC: America's Animal Factories - North Dakota came under criticism from north dakota Attorney general Heidi Heitkamp and Personal communication between Mark Trechock, dakota Resource Council, http://www.nrdc.org/water/pollution/factor/stnod.asp
Extractions: North Dakota has not implemented its solid waste law for factory farms even though the law covers farms as well as industry. Neighbors of a controversial factory pig farm have gone to court to force the state to enforce the law against factory farms. Today, most of the largest livestock operations in North Dakota are cattle feedlots. The most controversial operation in North Dakota, however, involves an industrial pig farm close to urban Grand Forks. Cattle farming, a familiar part of the North Dakota landscape, tends to be located in more rural parts of the state and is widely accepted by state residents. In recent years, public opposition has focused on a kind of farming that is relatively new to the state giant pig feedlots owned by out-of-state corporations. EnviroPork, a 5,000-sow operation that produces 110,000 piglets each year
American Indian Education Resources Students, familyCommunity, Programs, resources; American Indian Higher Education A Critical Bibliography on north American Indians Smithsonian http://cobalt.lang.osaka-u.ac.jp/~krkvls/edu.html
Extractions: American Indian Education Accountability, Curriculum, Professional Development, Students, Family-Community, Programs, Resources American Indian Higher Education Consortium A Bibiliography of American Indian and Alaska Native Education Resources Beyond Cultural Discontinuity Dropout Rates among American Indian and Alaska Native Students "Both Indians and Students" M. Ambler From The Tribal College Journal - 1997 Bilingual Education Policy and the Empowerment of American Indian Communities Teresa L. McCarty. From The Journal of Educational Issues of Language Minority Students, 1994 Center for Indian Education Arizona State University Center for American Indian Research and Education Berkeley, California "Changes in American Indian Education: A Historical Retrospective for Teachers in the United States" J. Reyhner (1989) Cradleboard Teaching Project "The Cradleboard Teaching Project turns on the lights in public education about Native American culture - past, present, and most important for the children - the Future. It comes out of Indian country, and reaches far beyond, into the mainstream classroom and into the future of education. " A Critical Bibliography on North American Indians Smithsonian Institution: "Images of Native Americans are all around us. They appear in movies, television, books, and sports; are used as symbols and logos for tires, butter, the environment, carpeting, and automobiles; and show up at different times of year as Halloween costumes, in Boy Scout and Campfire Girl rituals, and as guests at Thanksgiving feasts. Few of these images have any basis in reality, drawn as they are from one of the most closely held beliefs of American mythology. Indeed, even Indians themselves sometimes have a difficult time separating the reality of their lives as human beings from the fantasy expected of them by the rest of America. "
Newborn Screening Links University of Washington PKU Clinic, resources for Families and Professionals north dakota, north dakota maternal Child Health Page http://www.doh.wa.gov/EHSPHL/PHL/Newborn/links.htm
Extractions: You are here: DOH Home EHSPHL Home PHL Home NBS Home »Related Links Search Employees Site Directory: Related Links Disorders Health Professional's Page Parents Page Related Links ... Other States What should I know about these links? The following links are provided as supplemental information. The Newborn Screening program encourages all patients to discuss any concerns they have regarding newborn screening results with their health care provider or with follow-up staff at the Newborn Screening program. Phenylketonuria Children's PKU Network PKU Support Organization March of Dimes March of Dimes (Search for PKU) National PKU News News and Information about Phenylketonuria University of Washington PKU Clinic Resources for Families and Professionals Congenital Hypothyroidism The Magic Foundation General CH Information UW Congenital Hypothyroidism Clinic University of Washington CH Follow-Up Clinic Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia CAH Support Group Australia Inc. General CAH Information CARES Foundation General CAH Information Cornell Medical Center General CAH Information Johns Hopkins University A Guide for Patients and Their Families National Adrenal Diseases Foundation General CAH Information The Magic Foundation General CAH Information Hemoglobinopathies Comprehensive Sickle Cell Centers Comprehensive Sickle Cell Site Cooley's Anemia Foundation Comprehensive Thalassemia Page Mary Bridge Sickle Cell Program Mary Bridge Health Center in Tacoma
Societal Aspects Of Weather: Floods Coping with Flood The north dakota State University Extension Service offers The Learning Center A great general resource for information on floods http://sciencepolicy.colorado.edu/socasp/floods.html
Extractions: "Parts or all of over 20,000 communities in the United States are subject to a substantial risk of flooding. Some of these communities are along large rivers and smaller streams, some are in the desert, and some are on hillsides. With very few exceptions, almost all areas of the United States are subject to some kind of flooding when the right set of circumstances occur." From: The Learning Center Section 1. Organizations and Agencies Section 2. General Resources Section 1. Organizations and Agencies Association of State Floodplain Managers The Association of State Floodplain Managers is an organization of professionals involved in floodplain management, flood hazard mitigation, the National Flood Insurance Program, and flood preparedness, warning and recovery. The group has become a respected voice in floodplain management practice and policy in the United States because it represents the flood hazard specialists of local, state and federal government, the research community, the insurance industry, and the fields of engineering, hydrologic forecasting, emergency response, water resources, and others. Bureau of Reclamation CSU Flash Flood Lab The Flash Flood Lab at Colorado State University is a problem-focused, multi-disciplinary center providing applied research, education and a communication forum to reduce the future impact of flash flood disasters. This site provides information about the lab and flash floods, upcoming events, how to prepare for and survive a flood, and links to other relevant sites.
Extractions: info@ahrq.gov Presenters: Steven P. Wallace, Ph.D., Professor of Public Health and Associate Director of the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, Los Angeles, CA. William F. Benson, President, Benson Consulting Group, Silver Spring, MD. Richard Ludtke, Ph.D., Research Director, National Resource Center on Native American Aging, Center for Rural Health, University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Grand Forks, ND. Leander McDonald, Ph.D., Research Analyst, National Resource Center on Native American Aging, Center for Rural Health, University of North Dakota School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Grand Forks, ND. Margaret Moss, D.S.N., R.N., Assistant Professor, School of Nursing, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN. Yvonne Jackson, Ph.D., R.D., Director, Office for American Indian, Alaskan Native, and Native Hawaiian Program, Administration on Aging, Washington, DC. The first step in meeting any group's long-term care needs is to identify the needs of the group. Conducting valid needs assessments can be costly and complex. Fortunately, some readily available information about American Indian long-term care needs across the country exists, as does a project to help tribes identify their individual needs. It is also important when assessing American Indian long-term care needs to remember the importance of culture, family, and friends in delivering care to elders. Finally, according to, Steven Wallace of the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, the 2000 census has information about the number of people on reservations who reported self-care disabilities (