Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Life Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

University of Nebraska - Lincoln

1994

Discipline
Keyword
Publication

Articles 1 - 30 of 328

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Effects Of 17Β-Estradiol On Distribution Of Pituitary Isoforms Of Luteinizing Hormone And Follicle-Stimulating Hormone During The Follicular Phase Of The Bovine Estrous Cycle, F. N. Kojima, Andrea S. Cupp, T. T. Stumpf, D. D. Zalesky, M. S. Roberson, L. A. Werth, M. W. Wolfe, Roger J. Kittok, H. E. Grotjan, J. E. Kinder Dec 1994

Effects Of 17Β-Estradiol On Distribution Of Pituitary Isoforms Of Luteinizing Hormone And Follicle-Stimulating Hormone During The Follicular Phase Of The Bovine Estrous Cycle, F. N. Kojima, Andrea S. Cupp, T. T. Stumpf, D. D. Zalesky, M. S. Roberson, L. A. Werth, M. W. Wolfe, Roger J. Kittok, H. E. Grotjan, J. E. Kinder

Department of Animal Science: Faculty Publications

The objective of this study was to examine the influence of 17β-estradiol (E2) on distribution of LH and FSH isoforms during the follicular phase of the bovine estrous cycle prior to the preovulatory surges of LH and FSH. On Day 16 of the estrous cycle (Day 0 = estrus), intact controls (CONT; n = 4) were treated with prostaglandin F (PGF) to induce luteal regression and initiation of the follicular phase. Other cows were also treated with PGF and either ovariectomized (OVX; n = 5) or ovariectomized and given E2 implants (OVXE; n …


Cropwatch No. 94-24-2, Dec. 16, 1994, Lisa Brown Jasa Dec 1994

Cropwatch No. 94-24-2, Dec. 16, 1994, Lisa Brown Jasa

Crop Watch

Inside

1994 index .......................... 164

Grants for producers .......... 166

CropWatch order form........ 167

Annual survey .................... 167


Characterization Of General Esterases From Susceptible And Parathion-Resistant Strains Of The Greenbug (Homoptera: Aphididae), Midori Ono, Jonathan S. Richman, Blair Siegfried Dec 1994

Characterization Of General Esterases From Susceptible And Parathion-Resistant Strains Of The Greenbug (Homoptera: Aphididae), Midori Ono, Jonathan S. Richman, Blair Siegfried

Department of Entomology: Faculty Publications

A susceptible and two parathion-resistant strains of the greenbug, Schizaphis graminum (Rondani), exhibit three different patterns of general esterase isozymes in native polyacrylamide electrophoresis gels. Characterization of general esterase activity using α -naphtholic esters as model substrates indicated that the three strains differed in isozyme composition. The type-I1 strain, which had the highest level of resistance, exhibited the highest levels of general esterase activity under all assay conditions, and the type-I strain had consistently higher levels than the susceptible strain. In all three strains, these esterases were more active toward α -naphtholic esters with side chains of six or fewer …


Presentation Of The President's Special Award For Distinguished Service, Daniel R. Brooks Dec 1994

Presentation Of The President's Special Award For Distinguished Service, Daniel R. Brooks

Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications

Transcript of the presentation of the American Society of Parasitologists President's Special Award for Distinguished Service to Mary Louise Hanson Pritchard for 1994, by Daniel R. Brooks.


Phylogenetic Systematic Analysis Of The Trichostrongylidae (Nematoda), With An Initial Assessment Of Coevolution And Biogeography, Eric P. Hoberg, J. Ralph Lichtenfels Dec 1994

Phylogenetic Systematic Analysis Of The Trichostrongylidae (Nematoda), With An Initial Assessment Of Coevolution And Biogeography, Eric P. Hoberg, J. Ralph Lichtenfels

Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology: Faculty and Staff Publications

Phylogenetic analysis of the subfamilies of the Trichostrongylidae based on 22 morphological transformation series produced a single cladogram with a consistency index (CI) = 74.2%. Monophyly for the family was supported by the structure of the female tail and copulatory bursa. Two major clades are recognized: the Cooperiinae clade with the basal Cooperiinae and Libyostrongylinae + Trichostrongylinae, and the Graphidiinae clade with the basal Graphidiinae and Ostertagiinae + Haemonchinae. Dendrograms presented by Durette- Desset (1985) (CI = 56.1%) and Lichtenfels (1987), based on the key to the Trichostrongylidae by Gibbons and Khalil (1982) (CI = 59.0%), were found to be …


Whooping Crane Sightings In Nebraska, August 1994-January 1995, Steven Anschutz Dec 1994

Whooping Crane Sightings In Nebraska, August 1994-January 1995, Steven Anschutz

Nebraska Bird Review

The first arrival at Aransas National Wildlife Refuge in southern Texas was on October 5, 1994, and the last arrivals (a family group) were on January 12, 1995, the latest date that an adult pair had ever arrived at Aransas. A total of 132 (125 adult/subadult and 7 young) Whooping Cranes are wintering at Aransas, including 3 birds that spent the summer at Aransas. A solitary chick sighted with Sandhill Cranes in Oklahoma on January 2, 1995 is the 133rd crane in the flock. Since, under optimum conditions, 148 cranes were expected to reach Aransas during the fall migration, the …


"Index To Volume 62," From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1994), R. G. Cortelyou Dec 1994

"Index To Volume 62," From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1994), R. G. Cortelyou

Nebraska Bird Review

Index (12 pages)

Albino? 151

Alt, Jim 54, 59(2), 62, 68, 72, 80, 82(2), 83, 88, 107, 113, 115, 143, 144, 149. 151

Amiotte, Sue 50

Anderson, Neal 96

Anschultz, Steven Whooping Crane
Sightings During Spring
Migration, 1994 94

Whooping Crane Sightings, August 1004 - January 1995 149

Avocet, American 20, 21, 73. 98, 107, 133 .

Babcock, Colleen 89

Barn-Owl, Common 24, 25, 77, 110

Barth, Roland 109, 115

Bedows, Elliot 88

Birkman, Marjorie 58, 59, 60, 60, 68, 73, 80, 87, 88

Bittern, American 66, 67, 104, 128 Least 5. 90. 104

Blackbird, Brewer's 46 , 47, 62 …


Excerpts From The Minutes Of The Nebraska Ornithologists' Union Executive Committee Meeting, September 10, 1994, Robin Harding Dec 1994

Excerpts From The Minutes Of The Nebraska Ornithologists' Union Executive Committee Meeting, September 10, 1994, Robin Harding

Nebraska Bird Review

The 1995 annual spring meeting and field trips will be held at Camp Calvin Crest near Fremont, NE May 19-21. Most of the Executive Committee members agreed that presentation of one scientific paper on Saturday afternoon would be a desirable addition. The 1995 annual fall meeting will be at Halsey National Forest 4-H camp, tentatively on October 6-8. The Executive Committee decided against having a winter meeting.

Alice Kenitz discussed the printing of the Nebraska Ornithologists' Union (NOU) Field Card of Nebraska Birds. She reported that there may be some money available from the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission to …


Masthead From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1994) Dec 1994

Masthead From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1994)

Nebraska Bird Review

The Nebraska Bird Review is published quarterly in March, June, September, and December by the Nebraska Ornithologists' Union, Inc., as its official journal, and is sent to members not in' arrears for dues. Annual subscription rates (on a calendar-year basis only): $12.50 in the United States, $15.00 in Canada and Mexico, and $17.50 for all other countries, payable in advance. Single copies are $4.00 each, postpaid, in the United States, and $5.00 elsewhere. Send orders for back issues to Mary H. Pritchard, NOU Librarian, University of Nebraska State Museum, Lincoln, NI 68588-0514.


"Notes On Bird Sightings In Nebraska," From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1994) Dec 1994

"Notes On Bird Sightings In Nebraska," From Nebraska Bird Review (December 1994)

Nebraska Bird Review

Northern Waterthrush. At 9:35 a.m. on December 14, and again at 10:15 a.m. on December 21, 1994, I observed what I believe was the same bird on a Burlington Northern railroad embankment north of Gifford Road in Fontenelle Forest, Bellevue, NE. On December 14, I saw it for 7 seconds. It vocalized with a sharp "chink" as it hopped up on a fallen log, then vocalized again 6-7 seconds later as it jumped down into thick underbrush. It was silent on December 21, but I observed it for at least ten minutes as it walked at the foot of a …


Fall Field Report, August-November 1994, W. Ross Silcock, Richard C. Rosche Dec 1994

Fall Field Report, August-November 1994, W. Ross Silcock, Richard C. Rosche

Nebraska Bird Review

The fall season is a long one in terms of bird movements. The SUMMER FIELD REPORT detailed the post-breeding wanderings of herons and the beginning of shorebird migration. This report covers the end of these and the southward movements of insectivorous passerines, mainly in August and September, while seedeaters such as sparrows follow, mainly in September and October. Waterfowl generally bring up the rear, moving south just ahead of the freeze-up.

The fall season is probably the most exciting time for rare bird enthusiasts, as young birds of many species wander, often aimlessly, at this time of year before they …


Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (December 1994) 62(4) Dec 1994

Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (December 1994) 62(4)

Nebraska Bird Review

Table of Contents

Fall Field Report, August - November, 1994 ......................126

Observers for Fall Field Report ......................149

Whooping Crane Sightings, August 1994 - January 1995 ......................149

Notes on Bird Sightings in Nebraska ......................150

Excerpts from Minutes of NOU Executive Committee Meeting......................151

Index to Volume 62......................152


Ard News December 1994 Dec 1994

Ard News December 1994

Agricultural Research Division: News and Annual Reports

CONTENTS:

SEASON'S GREETINGS
INDIRECT COST RECOVERY BY ARD UNITS DURING FY 1994
USDA REORGANIZATION
NEW ARD PUBLICATIONS
DEVELOPMENT OF GRADUATE EDUCATION PROGRAMS
ARD ADMINISTERED GRANT AND AWARDS PROGRAMS
INDIRECT COSTS: MYTHS, FACTS AND FACILITIES
SPECIAL RESEARCH GRANT PROGRAM A WARDS
GRANTS AND CONTRACTS RECEIVED OCTOBER AND NOVEMBER, 1994
NEW OR REVISED PROJECTS
PROPOSALS SUBMITTED FOR FEDERAL GRANTS


The Prairie Naturalist Volume 26, No. 4. December 1994 Dec 1994

The Prairie Naturalist Volume 26, No. 4. December 1994

The Prairie Naturalist

REPRODUCTION OF RING-NECKED PHEASANTS IN IOWA ▪ T Z. Riley, J. B. Wooley, Jr. , and W. B. Rybarczyk

DIETARY COMPARISONS OF ADULT MALE COMMON GRACKLES, RED-WINGED BLACKBIRDS, AND YELLOW-HEADED BLACKBIRDS IN NORTH CENTRAL NORTH DAKOTA ▪ H. J. Homan, GM. Linz, W. J. Bleier, and R. B. Carlson

ECOGEOGRAPHY OF SOUTHERN BOG LEMMING AND MEADOW VOLE IN NORTH CENTRAL KANSAS ▪ T. L. Welker and J. R. Choate

SUMMER AND FALL FOOD HABITS OF COYOTES IN SOUTHWESTERN NORTH DAKOTA ▪ T. L. Lewis, W. F. Jensen, K. A. Keehr, and R. W. Seabloom

MOVEMENT PATTERNS OF WHITE-TAILED DEER AT …


Correlation Between Precolonization Of Trigeminal Ganglia By Attenuated Strains Of Pseudorabies Virus And Resistance To Wild-Type Virus Latency, L. M. Schang, G. F. Kutish, Fernando A. Osorio Dec 1994

Correlation Between Precolonization Of Trigeminal Ganglia By Attenuated Strains Of Pseudorabies Virus And Resistance To Wild-Type Virus Latency, L. M. Schang, G. F. Kutish, Fernando A. Osorio

Nebraska Center for Virology: Faculty Publications

We compared the levels of latent pseudorabies virus (PRV) DNA in trigeminal ganglia (TG) of pigs after intranasal inoculation of different PRV strains by using quantitative DNA PCR. The extent of colonization attained in each case varied significantly according to the type of strain and inoculum dose, wild-type (WT) PRV being the most efficient strain in colonizing TG. When groups of pigs representing different levels of precolonization of TG with an attenuated PRV strain were challenged with WT PRV, it became evident that there is a statistically significant inverse correlation between the extent of precolonization attained by an attenuated PRV …


Host Specificity Of Rhabdochona Canadensis (Nematoda: Rhabdochonidae) In Nebraska, Michael A. Barger, John J. Janovy Jr. Dec 1994

Host Specificity Of Rhabdochona Canadensis (Nematoda: Rhabdochonidae) In Nebraska, Michael A. Barger, John J. Janovy Jr.

John Janovy Publications

Intermediate and definitive host specificity of Rhabdochona canadensis in Nebraska were investigated. Mayfly nymphs Trichorythodes sp. and Caenis sp. were found to serve as experimental intermediate hosts. Development inside the nymphs required approximately 10 days, with the worms passing through two molts and then becoming encapsulated in the hemocoel as infective third-stage juveniles. Survey data revealed that only the red shiner Cyprinella lutrensis serves as definitive host for R. canadensis in nature. Laboratory infections of Notropis dorsalis, N. stramineus, and Fundulus zebrinus. all of which were uninfected in nature, were attempted to determine if observed specificity was due …


Second Intermediate Host-Specificity Of Haematoloechus Complexus And Haematoloechus Medioplexus (Digenea: Haematoloechidae), Scott D. Snyder, John J. Janovy Jr. Dec 1994

Second Intermediate Host-Specificity Of Haematoloechus Complexus And Haematoloechus Medioplexus (Digenea: Haematoloechidae), Scott D. Snyder, John J. Janovy Jr.

John Janovy Publications

Second intermediate host-specificity was examined for two species of the frog lung fluke genus Haematoloechus. Nine species of freshwater arthropods were exposed to cercariae of H. complexus and H. medioplexus. Metacercariae of H. complexus developed in all arthropod species used. Metacercariae of H. medioplexus developed only in anisopteran odonate naiads. This difference in host utilization may have epizootiological implications. The potential development of H. complexus in a greater number of arthropods than H. medioplexus may increase the chances of ingestion of H. complexus by an anuran host. The range of arthropods parasitized by H. complexus indicates that host-specificity …


Cropwatch No. 94-24, Nov.11, 1994, Lisa Brown Jasa Nov 1994

Cropwatch No. 94-24, Nov.11, 1994, Lisa Brown Jasa

Crop Watch

Inside

Conservation
compliance ........................ 164

Grass control in
winter wheat ..................... 165

Testing drinking water ........ 166

Herbicide chemistry ............ 166

Goatgrass Conference .......... 167

Winter meetings ................... 168


Tales That Teeth Tell, Patricia W. Freeman, Pauline R. Denham Illustrator Nov 1994

Tales That Teeth Tell, Patricia W. Freeman, Pauline R. Denham Illustrator

University of Nebraska State Museum: Mammalogy Papers

Many of us enjoy walking in the woods or prairie and looking for interesting natural items or behavior. My oldest child now takes delight in spotting and finding things before I do. Often we find skulls, teeth, and bones of mammals and, I suspect, many other people do too given the fact that many of these items are brought into the Museum to be identified. With just a little explanation about what mammals eat and the effect of these foods on the shapes of teeth, an observant person can start to categorize several common mammals if they know what to …


Development Of Semi-Intensive Aquaculture Technologies In Honduras: Summary Of Freshwater Aquacultural Research Conducted From 1983-1992, Bartholomew Green, David Teichert-Coddington, Terrill Hanson Nov 1994

Development Of Semi-Intensive Aquaculture Technologies In Honduras: Summary Of Freshwater Aquacultural Research Conducted From 1983-1992, Bartholomew Green, David Teichert-Coddington, Terrill Hanson

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Aquacultural research has been conducted collaboratively in Honduras since 1983 by the International Center for Aquaculture and Aquatic Environments, Auburn University, and the Direccion General de Pesca y Acuicultura, Secretaria de Recursos Naturales. This research was carried out at the El Carao National Fish Culture Research Center, Comayagua, Honduras, under the auspices of the USAID-financed Pond Dynamics/Aquaculture Collaborative Research Support Program (PD/A CRSP). The goal of the PD/A CRSP is to increase tilapia yields by optimizing resource use in systems based predominantly on natural pond productivity.


Irrigation And Culm Contribution To Yield And Yield Components Of Winter Wheat, Gregory S. Mcmaster, Wallace Wilhelm, Patricia N. S. Bartling Nov 1994

Irrigation And Culm Contribution To Yield And Yield Components Of Winter Wheat, Gregory S. Mcmaster, Wallace Wilhelm, Patricia N. S. Bartling

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Water is generally the limiting factor in U.S. Great Plains wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) production. With increasing demands for limited water, improving the efficacy of irrigation is critical. One technique is to irrigate during responsive stages of crop development, but few studies have examined this approach. This 2-yr study on a Nunn clay loam soil (fine, montmorillonitic, mesic Aridic Argiustoll) was designed to examine the effects of irrigation, based on stage of crop development, on winter wheat yield, yield components (on a plant basis), and specific culm responses. In the first year, the treatments were control (dryland), and irrigation …


Alpha Interferon-Induced Antiretroviral Activities: Restriction Of Viral Nucleic Acid Synthesis And Progeny Virion Production In Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Infected Monocytes, Lisa Baca-Regen, Nina Heinzinger, Mario Stevenson, Howard Gendelman Nov 1994

Alpha Interferon-Induced Antiretroviral Activities: Restriction Of Viral Nucleic Acid Synthesis And Progeny Virion Production In Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Infected Monocytes, Lisa Baca-Regen, Nina Heinzinger, Mario Stevenson, Howard Gendelman

Nebraska Center for Virology: Faculty Publications

Alpha interferon (IFN-a) restricts multiple steps of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-i) life cycle. A well-described effect of IFN-a is in the modulation of viral nucleic acid synthesis. We demonstrate that IFN-α influences HIV-1 DNA synthesis principally by reducing the production of late products of reverse transcription. The magnitude of IFN-α-induced downregulation of HIV-1 DNA and/or progeny virion production was dependent on the IFN-α concentration, the duration of cytokine administration, the multiplicity of infection, the viral strain, and the cycles of viral infection. Interestingly, reductions in viral DNAs could not fully account for the observed IFN-a-induced abrogation of …


Age-Related Resistance To 987p Fimbria-Mediated Colonization Correlates With Specific Glycolipid Receptors In Intestinal Mucus In Swine, Evelyn A. Dean-Nystrom, James E. Samuel Nov 1994

Age-Related Resistance To 987p Fimbria-Mediated Colonization Correlates With Specific Glycolipid Receptors In Intestinal Mucus In Swine, Evelyn A. Dean-Nystrom, James E. Samuel

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Strains of enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli that produce 987P fimbriae (987P+ strains) colonize the small intestines and cause diarrhea in neonatal (<6-day-old) pigs but not in weaned pigs. However, 987P+ E. coli strains adhere in vitro to intestinal epithelial cells from pigs of both ages. Two intestinal components, designated 987R and 987M, bind 987P fimbriae (987P) on Western blots (immunoblots). We examined brush borders (BB) and intestinal washes (IW) from pigs to determine if they contain glycolipids which bind 987P. Total glycolipid extracts from BB and IW of 4-week-old pigs were separated on thin-layer chromatograms and overlaid with purified 987P. Bound 987P were detected with 987P-specific antiserum. …


Imbibition Response Of Winter Wheat To Water-Filled Pore Space, Guillermo A. Studdert, Wallace Wilhelm, James F. Power Nov 1994

Imbibition Response Of Winter Wheat To Water-Filled Pore Space, Guillermo A. Studdert, Wallace Wilhelm, James F. Power

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Reduced temperature and increased bulk density associated with conservation tillage systems cause lower seed germination, seedling emergence, and early growth rates resulting in reduced plant stands. Prediction of the influence of soil condition on seed imbibition through simple soil measurements would help make agronomic decisions such as planting date and/or density. Our objectives were to evaluate the influence of soil water-filled pore space on winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) seed imbibition and to assess the possibility of describing the relationship through simple mathematical models. We measured the rate of water uptake by heat-killed wheat seeds at three levels of …


Cropwatch No. 94-23, Oct. 28, 1994, Lisa Brown Jasa Oct 1994

Cropwatch No. 94-23, Oct. 28, 1994, Lisa Brown Jasa

Crop Watch

Inside

This issue and the next two issues of CropWatch will feature notices of winter Extension meetings related to agricultural production and marketing. Make note of the dates and take advantage of these opportunities to learn the latest information.

Com rootworm insecticides ..... 157

Pesticide applicator tests .......... 158

Winter Extension meetings ...... 159

Soil moisture projections .......... 161

Freeze ends season .................... 161


Cropwatch No. 94-22, Oct. 14, 1994, Lisa Brown Jasa Oct 1994

Cropwatch No. 94-22, Oct. 14, 1994, Lisa Brown Jasa

Crop Watch

Inside

Biocontrol conference ..................150

Sooty strip in sorghum ....................... 152

Winterize your sprayer ..................152

Nebraska/Kansas
crop updates .................. 153

Precipitation projections ..................153

Nitrogen applicator ...................
maintenance ................... 154

Nebraska weather
statistics ......................... 154


Ten Generations Of Selection For Predicted Weight Of Testes In Swine: Direct Response And Correlated Response In Body Weight, Backfat, Age At Puberty, And Ovulation Rate, Rodger K. Johnson, Gregg R. Eckardt, Thomas A. Rathje, Denise K. Drudik Oct 1994

Ten Generations Of Selection For Predicted Weight Of Testes In Swine: Direct Response And Correlated Response In Body Weight, Backfat, Age At Puberty, And Ovulation Rate, Rodger K. Johnson, Gregg R. Eckardt, Thomas A. Rathje, Denise K. Drudik

Department of Animal Science: Faculty Publications

Selection for predicted weight of testes at 150 d of age (PWT) was practiced for 10 generations to determine the effect on reproductive and growth traits in swine. Mass selection among boars (line TS) or random selection (line C) was practiced beginning with the F3 generation of a Large White x Landrace composite population. Population size in each line was 40 to 45 litters by 15 sires per generation. Responses were estimated by regressions on cumulative selection differentials for PWT and on generation number and by mixed-model derivative-free REML procedures. The realized heritability of PWT was .35 ± .02 and …


Comparison Of Disulfide Contents And Solubility At Alkaline Ph Of Insecticidal And Noninsecticidal Bacillus Thuringiensis Protein Crystals, Cheng Du, Phyllis A.W. Martin, Kenneth W. Nickerson Oct 1994

Comparison Of Disulfide Contents And Solubility At Alkaline Ph Of Insecticidal And Noninsecticidal Bacillus Thuringiensis Protein Crystals, Cheng Du, Phyllis A.W. Martin, Kenneth W. Nickerson

Papers in Microbiology

We compared two insecticidal and eight noninsecticidal soil isolates of Bacillus thuringiensis with regard to the solubility of their proteinaceous crystals at alkaline pH values. The protein disulfide contents of the insecticidal and noninsecticidal crystals were equivalent. However, six of the noninsecticidal crystals were soluble only at pH values of ≥12. This lack of solubility contributed to their lack of toxicity. One crystal type which was soluble only at pH ≥12 (strain SHP 1-12) did exhibit significant toxicity to tobacco hornworm larvae when the crystals were presolubilized. In contrast, freshly prepared crystals from the highly insecticidal strain HD-1 were solubilized …


The Sower, Fall 1994 Oct 1994

The Sower, Fall 1994

The Sower (CASNR Alumni Newsletter)

Contents:

Arnold, Gingery receive 1994 Alumni Awards
From Your Association President
ASAP Program kickoff held October 20
From the Dean’s Desk
College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources Student Ambassadors
Career Services Center available to alumni
Girl Scout Tech-Holiday
Red Letter Days
CASNR Career Day
High School Scholars Research Program
Placement Library moves
Ag Career Day in York
CASNR Alumni Update Day - March 17,1995
What have you been up to since graduation?
1994-95 CASNRAA Board of Directors


Ard News October 1994 Oct 1994

Ard News October 1994

Agricultural Research Division: News and Annual Reports

CONTENTS:
COMMENTS FROM THE DEAN
NORTH CENTRAL REGION SARE and ACE PROGRAMS
NATIONAL RESEARCH INITIATIVE UPDATE
PRESIDENT CLINTON'S RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT GOALS FOR FY 1996
FY 1995 CSRS BUDGET
ROLE OF THE PRIVATE SECTOR IN AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH
GRADUATE STUDENT ENROLLMENT FOR 1994-1995
FORM FOR RECORDING INDUSTRY OR FOUNDATION INCOME
REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL APPROVAL AND SUBMISSION
GOOD LABORATORY PRACTICES VIDEO
GRANTS AND CONTRACTS RECEIVED AUGUST AND SEPTEMBER, 1994
PROPOSALS SUBMITTED FOR FEDERAL GRANTS
NEW OR REVISED PROJECTS
WHAT A DOLLAR SPENT FOR FOOD PAID FOR IN 1993