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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
Southwest Research-Extension Center, Kansas State University, Staff, Acknowledgments, R. Gillen
Southwest Research-Extension Center, Kansas State University, Staff, Acknowledgments, R. Gillen
Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Reports
2017 Southwest Research-Extension Center Faculty and Staff. Acknowledgments.
Southwest Research-Extension Center, Kansas State University, Staff, Acknowledgments, R. Gillen
Southwest Research-Extension Center, Kansas State University, Staff, Acknowledgments, R. Gillen
Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Reports
Cover page, staff, and acknowledgments for Southwest Research-Extension Center's Field Day Report 2016.
Farm And Home Research: 50-2, Larry Tennyson, Jerry Leslie, Jaimi Reimer, Stephanie Misar
Farm And Home Research: 50-2, Larry Tennyson, Jerry Leslie, Jaimi Reimer, Stephanie Misar
Farm and Home Research
In this Issue:
[Page] 2- Director’s comments
[Page] 3- President’s comments
[Page] 4- ‘Hope’: Edgar McFadden’s legacy: a bountiful harvest and bread for the world
[Page] 8- Break the sell-cheap, buy-high syndrome: State yearly loses millions in wages and other incomes by shipping out raw commodities
[Page] 10- Lessons and labs: Students jump-start their careers by working in SDSU labs
[Page] 12- Our ‘helping hands’ : A salute to technicians, students, secretaries—the research work crew
[Page] 14- Forewarned to forearmed: In climatology, knowing the past is key to predicting the future
[Page] 17- Wheat streak mosaic virus: In normal year, …
Soil Test Results For 1967, Harold F. Miller
Soil Test Results For 1967, Harold F. Miller
Agronomy Notes
The results of soil samples tested in laboratores under the supervision of the University of Kentucky Agricultural Experiment Station during 1967 have now been summarized.
Finely Ground Agricultural Limestone Is Available, George D. Corder
Finely Ground Agricultural Limestone Is Available, George D. Corder
Agronomy Notes
Kentucky farmers can purchase a more finely ground limestone than they could 1 year ago.
The Department of Agronomy, Agricultural Experiment Station, University of Kentucky, recommends that agricultural limestone be ground fine enough that at least 45 percent will pass through a 50-mesh screen. This is equivalent to the old recommendation that at least 40 percent pass through a 60-mesh screen.