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41. HIA Contacts
Univ. of Arkansas Cooperative ext. service 2301 S. University Ave. PO Box 391 mississippi Melissa Mixon School of Human Sciences Box 9745
http://www.montana.edu/wwwcxair/contacts.htm
Who Can Help You in Your State?
AS

National Program Contacts
USDA Partner
Joseph L. Wysocki
USDA/CSREES/NRE
Housing and Environment
1400 Independence Ave, STOP 2210
Washington, DC 20250-2210
Ph: 202-401-4980, Fax: 202-401-1706
E-mail: jwysocki@reeusda.gov
U.S. Department of Agriculture - Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service
EPA Partner
Dennis Hellberg U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Indoor Environments Division 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW (MC 6609J) Washington, D.C. 20460 Ph: 202-343-9366, Fax: 202-565-2071 E-ma il: Hellberg.Dennis@epamail.epa.gov U.S. Environmental Protection Agency - Indoor Environments Division Project Director Michael P. Vogel Montana State Univ. Extension Service

42. Should You Attempt Fish Farming? Considerations For Prospective Fish Growers
mississippi State University Cooperative Extension service mississippi State, MS39762 MonthlyFree. Georgia Fish Farmer University of Georgia
http://www.ext.vt.edu/pubs/fisheries/420-897/420-897.html
Should You Attempt Fish Farming? Considerations for Prospective Fish Growers
Publication Number 420-897, Posted April 1997 Authors: Louis A. Helfrich, Fisheries Extension Specialist, and George S. Libey, Associate Professer, Aquaculture; Department of Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences, Virginia Tech
Table of Contents
Introduction Answer Yes or No Fish Farming Publications Selected Fish Farming Books ... Organizations
Introduction
Fish farming is an ancient practice that can provide many profitable opportunities today. The raising and selling of fish on a commercial basis has proven to be economically successful throughout the United States. In Virginia, fish farming is growing in popularity. Increasing recognition that fish is a healthy food, low in calories and cholesterol levels, but rich in protein has increased consumer demand in both restaurants and supermarkets. Consumption of fish products is increasing dramatically and now averages about 14 pounds/person/year in Virginia.
Fish are excellent animals to rear. They can convert feed into body tissue more efficiently than most farm animals, transforming about 70 percent of their feed into flesh. Fish also have excellent dress-out qualities, providing an average of 60 percent body weight as marketable product and a greater proportion of edible, lean tissue than most livestock. Fish can be intensively cultured in relatively small amounts of water. In Virginia, they can be farmed at densities near 2,000 pounds/acre with careful management. Farm-reared fish offer a new alternative agricultural crop that can potentially replace those which are declining in popularity or profitability. Healthy farm-reared fish, guaranteed free of diseases, pesticides, and other harmful toxicants, are a more desirable substitute for wild fish from potentially polluted waters.

43. Nitrogen Fertility Effects On Bt {delta}-Endotoxin And Nitrogen Concentrations O
determined at the mississippi Cooperative extension service Soil Testing andPlant Tissue ext. Serv. Inf. Sheet 864. MS State Univ. ext. service.
http://agron.scijournals.org/cgi/content/full/95/1/207
HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ... TABLE OF CONTENTS QUICK SEARCH: [advanced] Author:
Keyword(s):
Year: Vol: Page:
This Article Abstract Figures Only Full Text (PDF) ... Alert me if a correction is posted Services Similar articles in this journal Similar articles in ISI Web of Science Alert me to new issues of the journal Download to citation manager ... Cited by other online articles Search for citing articles in:
ISI Web of Science (3)
PubMed Articles by Bruns, H. A. Articles by Abel, C. A. Agricola Articles by Bruns, H. A. Articles by Abel, C. A. Related Collections Maize Management
Maize

Pest Management Systems

Plant Nutrition
...
Nitrogen
Agronomy Journal
American Society of Agronomy
PRODUCTION PAPERS
Nitrogen Fertility Effects on Bt -Endotoxin and Nitrogen Concentrations of Maize during Early Growth
H. Arnold Bruns ,a and Craig A. Abel b a USDA-ARS, Crop Genet. and Prod. Res. Unit, Box 345, Stoneville, MS 38776
b USDA-ARS, Southern Insect Manage. Res. Unit, Box 346, Stoneville, MS 38776 * Corresponding author ( Received for publication March 4, 2002.

44. IFA Directory Section Five
Cooperative ext. service Box 5446 mississippi State, MS 39762 (601) 3252085e-mail -. North Carolina. Dr. Charles Apperson Dept. of Entomology Box 7613
http://entweb.clemson.edu/fireant/dir/sec5.htm
Section Five Cooperative Extension personnel Alabama Kathy L. Flanders
Extension Entomologist and Assistant Professor
208 A Extension Hall
Auburn University, AL 36849-5629
Tel: 334-844-6393
FAX: 334-844-5002
email: kflander@acesag.auburn.edu Arkansas Dr. Donald Johnson
P.O. Box 391
University of Arkansas
Little Rock, AR 72203
email: djohnson@uaex.edu California Dr. Vernard Lewis University of California Dept. of Entomological Sciences 201 Wellman Hall Berkeley, CA 94720 e-mail - Florida Dr. Phil Koehler University of Florida Gainesville, FL 32611 e-mail - Georgia Beverly Sparks Professor and Extension Program Coordinator-Entomology The University of Georgia 463 Biological Sciences Building Athens, GA 30602

45. Interregional Research Project #4
ext. service Hort Crops Res. Station 3800 Castle Hayne Road Castle Hayne, NC, 28429 Univ of California coop ext Suite B 2279 Del Oro Ave
http://ir4.rutgers.edu/Cindex.cfm?nd=nd&letter=C

46. 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
2005 ESP Chapter Presidents
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

47. Priester Conference 1999 - Participants
mississippi State U. ext. service Box 9647 mississippi State, MS 39762 National 4H Program Leader Cooperative St. Research, Ed. ext. service
http://www.nnh.org/newpriester/participants99.htm
Home Priester Conference 1999 Priester Conference Participants
A

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H
I
J

K

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S T U V W X Y Z Amanda Alter National 4-H Council 7100 Connecticut Ave. Chevy Chase, MD 20815-4999 Fax: 301-961-2894 Phone: 301-961-2970 Monika Baege University of Vermont 617 Cornstock Rd., Suite 5 Berlin, VT 05602-9194 monika.baege@uvm.edu Fax: 802-223-6500 Phone: 802-223-2389 ext. 21 Randy Bernhardt Teacher Services Team Leader National FFA Organization PO Box 68960 Indianapolis, IN 46268 rbernhardt@ffa.org Fax: 317-802-5311 Phone: 317-802-4311 Melina Bersamin Graduate Assistant, BAPPS University of California, Davis One Shields Ave. Davis, CA 95616-8523 mmbersamin@ucdavis.edu Fax: 530-752-5660 Phone: 530-752-7069 Sherry Betts Extension Specialist The University of Arizona 1110 East. South Campus Dr.

48. Communicators Guide For Federal, State, Regional, And Local Communicators - Chap
Dr. Denise Decker, Customer service Manager, Natural Resources Conservation service, CO 805234050, douglass@coop.ext.colostate.edu, (970) 491-6430.
http://govinfo.library.unt.edu/npr/library/papers/bkgrd/chapter7.html
National Partnership for Reinventing Government Table of Contents
Archive
Chapter Seven
Contributors
"Some editors are failed writers, but so are most writers." - T. S. Eliot Susan Bale, Web master, Kansas State University, 307 Umberger Hall, Manhattan, KS 66506-3402, sbale@oz.oznet.ksu.edu Lew Brodsky, Director of Public and Congressional Affairs, Selective Service System, 1515 Wilson Blvd., 4th Floor, Arlington, VA 22209, lbrodsky@sss.gov Susan Buchanan. Publications Editor, Office of Communications, Peace Corps, 1111 20th St., N.W., Washington, DC, 20526, sbuchanan@peacecorps.gov Kurt Byers, Communications Manager/Editor, University of Alaska Sea Grant College Program, PO Box 755040, Room 203 O'Neill Bldg., Fairbanks, AK, fnkmb1@uaf.edu Donise Cheeks, Senior Analyst, Office of Research, Internal Revenue Service, Washington, DC 20224, donise.cheeks@irs.gov Dr. Denise Decker, Customer Service Manager, Natural Resources Conservation Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Room 6812-S, Washington, DC 20250, denise.decker@usda.gov

49. Pricing
One 10000acre tract of land along the mississippi River leased for $10 an acreand returned Pricing for services. Wyo. coop. ext. Serv., Laramie. 12 p.
http://uwadmnweb.uwyo.edu/RanchRecr/handbook/pricing.htm
Pricing It Right the First Time Determining the right price to charge for the ranch recreation experience is difficult for a rancher with no experience in the business. Too often ranchers underestimate what their services are worth to potential customers. Living in rural areas, they take for granted such things as the scenery and seeing wildlife. They may not recognize that urban and suburban hunters view the ranch as a place "to get away from it all."
But urbanites are eager to enjoy these pleasures and look forward to hunting season with great anticipation. As soon as one year's hunting is ended, they often start planning next year's and may schedule their hunting vacations many months or a year in advance. Hunting on your ranch is therefore the fulfillment of someone's year-long dream. If you fulfill it well, you can price accordingly.
At the other extreme is the rancher who attempts to pay off the mortgage with an excessive charge for poor quality service. A one-time rip-off does not build the repeat customer clientele upon which most successful ranch recreation operations are dependent.
There is a wide range of rate structures among hunting enterprises, depending on location and the variety and level of services provided by the rancher (such as dog, guide, lodging, meals, ammunition, licenses, trap shooting, field dressing, decoys, camping, etc.). Check around in your area.

50. Natural Resources Extension Professionals Conference
Chris Waddill, Dean and Director, Florida cooperative extension service, Universityof University of Arkansas coop. ext. service, Little Rock, AR
http://conference.ifas.ufl.edu/nrep/
This conference has concluded the information is provided here to assist you in
planning for your attendance at future conferences.
3rd Natural Resource
Extension Professionals
Conference
Revolutionizing or Evolutionizing
Extension Programming?
June 2-5, 2002 The Naples Beach Hotel and Golf Club
Naples, Florida

PDF Print Version of Conference Program and Abstracts
S ITE I NDEX Introduction Pre-conference Activities Programmatic Themes Submission of Revised ... For Further Information Introduction Conference Theme
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 today’s 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.

51. On-Farm Composting: Animal Mortality Composting
PublMiss-State-Univ,-coop-ext-Serv. State College, Miss. cooperative extensionService, mississippi State University. Kashmanian, Richard M. 1994.
http://www1.agric.gov.ab.ca/$department/deptdocs.nsf/all/sag2147
Home Find Staff Calculators Directories ... Links
On-Farm Composting: Animal Mortality Composting
On-Farm Composting - A Review of the Literature AAFRD, Chernos, Rod, and Smith, Rich. "Mortality Composting Trial ." Web page, [accessed 19 January 2000]. Available at http://www.agric.gov.ab.ca/livestock/pindex/poultry/ppw02.html
Blake, J. P., and J. O. Donald. 1992. Alternatives for the disposal of poultry carcasses. Poult-Sci 71, no. 7: 1130-1135.
Compost Education and Resources for Western Agriculture. 2000. "CERWA answers your compost questions." Web page, [accessed April 2000]. Available at http://www2.aste.usu.edu/compost/qanda/qa1.htm
Conner, D. E., J. P. Blake, and J. O. Donald. 1991. Microbiological safety of composted poultry farm mortalities. In Pap-Am-Soc-Agric-Eng, (91-4053) 12 p. St. Joseph, Mich: American Society of Agricultural Engineers.
Cummins, C. G., C. W. Wood, and D. P. Delaney. 1993. Co-composted poultry mortalities and poultry litter: composition and potential value as a fertilizer. J-Sustain-Agric 4, no. 1: 7-19.
Donald, J. O., and J. P. Blake. 1991. Construction of a dead-poultry composter. Circ-ANR-Ala-Coop-Ext-Serv-Auburn-Univ. Auburn, Ala. : The Service 604: 4 p.

52. MSLawyer.com - Mississippi Law Firms - Attorney And Law Firm Directory
Coop ext. service Info. mississippi Zip Codes New Web Sites CLE Seminars -Bar CLE Seminars - UM LawNetCom Events LawGuru.com Legal Research
http://www.mslawyer.com/directorin.html
Sponsor Links >> US Legal Forms SearchLaw USLegal Divorce.com ... RealAttorney
Mississippi D irectories and I ndexes
Internet Search Engines

People Search Engines

Practice Areas

Practice Areas I

Practice Areas II

Practice Areas III

Practice Areas IV
...
Meta Practice Areas
Resource Lists
Lawyers Resource I
Lawyers Resource Other Resources Most Popular Findlaw Court TV Law Reviews State Courts ... Law Journal Extra Court Directories Supreme Court Circuit Court Judges Chancery Court County Court Judges ... Bar Directory U.S. Directories U.S. District Court Fifth Circuit Bankruptcy Court All Federal ... Federal Circuits Associations American Bar Mississippi Bar Mississippi Trial Lawyers Federal Bar ... Lease Enforcement Attorney Network July 2002 What's in the News! The Mississippi Supreme Court and Court of Appeals will render no more unpublished opinions. See Amendment to MRAP Findlaw Dictionary Findlaw Findlaw is one of the best general legal indexes available on the Web. It is also home of the U.S. Supreme Court Opinions from 1887 to date. We are Search Law For Mississippi authorities, SearchLaw is the answer, with over 22 legal databases, including many not available from any other electronic source.

53. League Service Corporations
6422 (Mark) Fax 469385-6505 e-mail thodge@tcul.org mchatfield@tcul.coop mississippi League Services Corporation 1400 Lakeover Road, Suite 200
http://www.cuna.org/cuna/lsc_roster.html
SEARCH
All CUNA sites Compliance Consumer Info Gov. Affairs Reg. Advocacy Strategic Services Training Governmental Affairs Regulatory Advocacy Compliance Consumer Information ... Strategic Services
League Service Corporations
Revised 10-11-2002 **Shipping and Parcel Post Only
AK
Robert (Bob) Teachworth, League Board Chair
Alaska League Services, Inc.
1020 South Bailey Street
Palmer, AK 99645-6999
P.O. Box 739
Palmer, AK 99645-0739
Phone: 907-562-1255 (will refer callers to the league's website - www.alaskacreditunions.org)
AL
Jo Lynn Rutledge, Executive Vice President, Financial Services
ACUL Corporation
22 Inverness Center, Suite 200
Birmingham, AL 35242-4885 P. O. Box 380428 Birmingham, AL 35238-0428 Phone: 205-991-9710 Ext. 113 Fax: 205-991-2576 e-mail: jrutledge@acul.com
AR
Tom Hodge, CLE, Vice President Mark Chatfield, SVP, Chief Mktg Officer Credit Union Resources, Inc. 4455 LBJ Freeway Ste. 201 Farmers Branch, TX 75244-5998 P.O. Box 655147 Dallas, TX 75265-5147 Phone: 469-385-6400, ext. 6424 (Tom), ext. 6422 (Mark) Fax: 469-385-6505 e-mail: thodge@tcul.org

54. CASE Members
Cooperative extension service New Mexico State University PO Box 30003 MSC 3AE mississippi State, MS 39762 Phone (662)3253462 cliffh@ext.msstate.edu
http://www.casd.cornell.edu/case/case_members.htm
Consortium Consortium Business About CASD-Home CASD Members CASE Members ... Project Framework for Change Tools for Change Diversity Leader-Lead Administrator Change Agent Administrator Diversity Coordinator Framework for Organizational Change ... Annual Desk Audit Promising Practices Volumes I and II Climate Assessments Evaluation Accomplishments and Lessons Learned Diversity Web Pages Arizona Idaho Missouri National Virtual Diversity Center ... Pennsylvania Other Resources Upcoming Conferences Relevant Diversity Resources
CASE Members
North Central NorthEast Western Southern Updated - June, 2004
North Central
* coordinator(s) of each state South Dakota
*Ralph Matz, Program Coordinator

AgHall 130 Box 2207D SDSU
Brookings, SD 57007

55. IT Webbook About The Authors
mississippi State University Bost ext. Center, Rm 404 Box 9642 Penn State coop.ext. 650 Leonard St., Rm. 210 Clearfield, PA 16830 814765-7878
http://www.cas.nercrd.psu.edu/Publications/Webbook/wbAboutAuthors.htm

56. Florist New Haven Connecticut, Connecticut
Agric., coop. ext. Serv. S544.3.N3C66 ISSN 08951985 Reno, Nev. The College.Fact sheet - cooperative extension service, University of Maryland Fact sheet
http://creekin.net/k19675-n210-florist-new-haven-connecticut-connecticut.html
Creekin.net World Travel Information Source Countries About Us Contact
Florist New Haven Connecticut
Connecticut
Principal Locations
  • Bridgeport
    Greenwich

    Hartford

    Middletown
    ...
    Storrs

  • Resources
    Florist New Haven Connecticut
    Tax News/US Attorneys' Tax Press Releases, 2004 Five New York Business Owners Plead Guilty to Tax Evasion Scheme (October 15, 2004) (D. New Jersey) ... Two Former Directors of the New York Racing Association's Pari-Mutuel Department Plead Guilty to Scheme to Defraud the United States (May 6, 2004) (E.D. New York) ... Hudson County Newspaper Publisher Sentenced to 12 Months for Tax Evasion (November 15, 2004) (D. New Jersey) ... [ Read More List of Journals Indexed in AGRICOLA 1995 : F Read More List of Journals Indexed in AGRICOLA 1996 : F New Haven, Conn. : The Station. ... Focus on renewable natural resources - University of Idaho, Forest, Wildlife and Range Experiment Station ...

    57. New Horticultural Crops For The Southeastern United States
    coop. ext. Serv. 1992) and mayhaw. There are currently 4 to 10 ha in mayhaws Louisiana cooperative extension service. Commercial blueberry production.
    http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/proceedings1993/v2-082.html
    Index Search Home Table of Contents Lamberts, M. 1993. New horticultural crops for the southeastern United States. p. 82-92. In: J. Janick and J.E. Simon (eds.), New crops. Wiley, New York.
    New Horticultural Crops for the Southeastern United States
    Mary Lamberts
  • FRUIT CROPS
  • Alabama
  • Florida
  • Georgia ...
  • Table 3 There are many reasons for the upsurge in interest in new horticultural crops. One industry expert (Cook 1990) reported that during the period between 1978 and 1989, consumption of fresh produce in the United States expanded 23%. The retail produce industry is now worth $32 billion. While the aging of American consumers also is a factor which can lead to overall reduced food purchases, it also has the potential for proportional increases in fresh fruit and vegetable consumption. Americans between the ages of 55 and 64 consume 39% more fresh fruit and 34% more fresh vegetables than the national average. As consumers move into their peak income-earning years, they purchase more high-value products and look for greater diversity. According to Manning (1990), the American produce industry has been riding the crest of a powerful demographic wave which will flatten by the year 2000. Manning predicts that although the nutritional appeal of fresh fruits and vegetables will continue, health options for consumers will increase; growers will need to create more demand and retailers will need to be convinced that consumers will pay more for produce before raising wholesale prices.
  • 58. My Master Gardener Page
    Los Angeles Master Gardeners , Univ. of Calif. coop. ext. Florida Countycooperative extension service Master Gardener Coordinators
    http://www.hal-pc.org/~trobb/mastgar.html

    HOMEPAGE (MY TOOLSHED)
    MY GARDEN THE OLD GARDENER
    Updated February 12, 2004
    You are visitor A separate and distinct area of gardening is that of the Master Gardener - the voluntary arm of the Agricultural Extension Services. As a Past President and member of the Harris County Master Gardener Association (Houston, Texas), I am more familiar with the Texas Master Gardener program but Master Gardening is nationwide in scope and on this page I will be attempting to put it all together. I am often asked the question, "Who and what are 'Master Gardeners'"? The following comments, questions and answers are geared primarily to the Texas Master Gardener Program. However, with slight differences, they also apply to all 50 states since all now have "Master Gardener Programs". They also generally apply in the four Canadian provinces with the program except for the sponsorship of Cooperative Extension agencies. Master Gardeners are members of the local community who take an active interest in their lawns, trees, shrubs, flowers and gardens. They are enthusiastic, willing to learn and to help others, and able to communicate with diverse groups of people. What really sets Master Gardeners apart from other home gardeners is their special training in horticulture. In exchange for their training, persons who become Master Gardeners contribute time as volunteers, working through their cooperative Extension office to provide horticulture-related information to their communities.

    59. SCTCSA-2002 -- Participants
    Paul Denton (pdenton@utk.edu), Tennessee Ag. ext. service, Knoxvile, TN, USA Rick Reed, Univ. of GA coop. extension service, Douglas, GA, USA
    http://www.ag.auburn.edu/nsdl/sctcsa/sctcsa_2002/participants.html
    Home Participants Home Program Call for Papers Publication Guidelines ... Links
    Participants
    Randy Akridge (jakridge@acesag.auburn.edu), Brewton Experiment Field, Brewton, Al, U.S.A.
    Fred L. Allen (allenf@utk.edu), University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN, U.S.A.
    Earl Allen , Allen Farms, Gaston, NC, U.S.A.
    Merle Anders (rrec_manders@futura.net), University of Arkansas, Stuttgart, AR, U.S.A.
    Winford Andrews (winford.andrews@al.usda.gov), USDA-NRCS, Eutaw, AL, U.S.A.
    Randall Armstrong (harmstro@acesag.auburn.edu), Auburn University, Florence, AL, U.S.A.
    Dana L. Ashford (dana.ashford@nc.usda.gov), USDA-NRCS, Clinton, NC, U.S.A.
    Richard C. Aycock (richard.aycock@la.usda.gov), USDA-Natural Resources Conservation Service, Alexandria, LA, U.S.A.
    Mike Baker (michael.w.baker@monsanto.com), Monsanto, Knightdale, NC, U.S.A.
    Kip Balkcom (kbalkcom@nprl.usda.gov), USDA-ARS, Dawson, GA, U.S.A.
    James S. Bannon (bannojs@auburn.edu), Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station, Auburn University, AL, U.S.A.

    60. CSREES - USDA - Land-Grant University Contacts
    Cons. Educ. MSU extension service mississippi State University PO Box 9601 Director , ext. Family Programs Cooperative extension service
    http://www.csrees.usda.gov/nea/family/res/family_res_contacts.html
    Home Contact Us Site Map Search ... Newsroom
    Land-Grant University Contacts ALABAMA
    Dr. Jannie Jones-Carter
    Extension Program Leader
    Cooperative Extension Systems
    P.O. Box 967
    Normal, AL 35762
    Phone: 256-858-4943
    Fax: 256-851-5840
    E-Mail: jcarter@acesag.auburn.edu
    Dr. Martha R. Johnson State Program Leader Cooperative Extension Systems Auburn University 107-A Duncan Hall Auburn University, AL 36849-5616 Phone: 334-844-5541 Fax: 334-844-5544 E-Mail: mjohnson@acesag.auburn.edu Dr. Eunice A. Bonsi District Agent Cooperative Extension Services Tuskegee University 200 Extension Building Tuskegee, AL 36088 Phone: 334-727-8816 Fax: 334-724-4199 E-Mail: ebonsi@tusk.edu ALASKA Dr. Sheryl Stanek Ext. Home Economics Program Alaska Cooperative Extension University of Alaska 2221 E. Northern Lights Blvd., Suite 118 Anchorage, AK 99508-4143 Phone: 907-786-6313 Fax: 907-786-6312 E-Mail: afsas@uaa.alaska.edu AMERICAN SAMOA Dr. Darlene P. Moss State Coord, Family/Consumer Ed. Cooperative Extension Service America Samoa Community College P.O. Box 5319, Land Grant Programs

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