Untitled Document ext.); House Bat Management (US Fish and Wildlife service). Bears Black Bears(Pennsylvania State coop. ext.); European starlings (utah coop. ext.). http://www.berrymaninstitute.org/internetpubs.htm
Extractions: On-Line Wildlife Damage Publications General Mammals General Controlling Nuisance Mammals (Missouri Coop. Ext.) WildlifeHow to help wild critters leave the attic or basement (Oregon Coop. Ext.) Armadillo Controlling Armadillo Damage in Alabama (Alabama Coop. Ext.) Controlling Armadillo Damage (Texas Coop. Ext.)
Utah State University Extension Service Website for all utah offices http//extension.usu.edu/coop/regions/index 2 IRONCOUNTY (435) 5868132; FAX (435) 586-3314; email iron@ext.usu.edu http://www.suhumanservices.com/resources/158.htm
Extractions: Description: Family and Consumer Sciences: Address individual and family concerns related to family relationships, child care and development, nutrition and food preparation, safe food handling, preservation, financial management and consumer skills, selection and care of clothing and social issues which affect the family. Agriculture/Horticulture: Address individual and family concerns related to gardening, food production, yard maintenance, pest control, farm animal and agriculture production. Youth/4-H: Provide individual and group programs and projects for youth ages third through twelfth grade. Services: Provide individual and group educational programs and resource materials; present and arrange workshops and seminars; address individual questions and concerns. Family Nutrition Program: Nutrition assistants hold individual lessons or group classes on nutrition and can help clients learn how to make food money last longer, shopping and preparation skills, recipes and feeding infants and children.
CSREES - USDA - Urban Program Resources Maine Doug Babkirk University of Maine coop.ext. University extension service virgilc@ext.msstate.edu. utahScott McKendrick utah State University extension http://www.csrees.usda.gov/nea/family/part/urban_part_contacts.html
Ornamental And Shade Trees For Utah: A Tree Guide For Michigan State University extension. Urban Forestry Bibliography 00000557. 05/01/96. Ornamental and shade trees for utah A tree guide for intermountain communities. McPherson, E.G. and Graves, G.H. ext Circ EC coop ext Serv utah State Univ. Logan, utah The service. May 1984 http://www.msue.msu.edu/imp/modb1/00000557.html
Extractions: Urban Forestry Bibliography - 00000557 McPherson, E.G. and Graves, G.H. Ext Circ EC Coop Ext Serv Utah State Univ. Logan, Utah : The Service. May 1984. (406) 144 p. ill., maps. ISSN: 0500-778X Go To Top of File MSU Extension Home Page Main Page for this Data Base This information is for educational purposes only. References to commercial products or trade names does not imply endorsement by MSU Extension or bias against those not mentioned. This information becomes public property upon publication and may be printed verbatim with credit to MSU Extension. Reprinting cannot be used to endorse or advertise a commercial product or company. This file was generated from data base B1 on 03/09/98. Data base B1 was last revised on 05/01/96. For more information about this data base or its contents please contact heatley@msue.msu.edu . Please read our for important information about using our site.
Strengthening Communities Enhancing Extension's Role EMail ljb@srdc.msstate.eduDavid Bell. Assoc. Professor/ext. Specialist. utah State Univ extension Educator-4-H Youth Dev. Purdue coop. ext. service-Hendricks Co http://www.srdc.msstate.edu/cred/02conf/participants.pdf
B_E-G US Dept. Int., Fish and Wildlife service, Twin Cities, Minnesota. Pgs. 124125. Wildl.Res. and utah coop. Wildl. Rep., Wildl. ext., Univ. of Ca., Davis. 10pp. http://www.mountainlion.net/beg.htm
Extractions: E - F - G East, B. 1979. Cougar Comeback in the East. Am. Forests 85(11):21, 54-59. Eaton, R.L. 1971. Florida Panther. National Parks and Cons. Mag. 45(12):18-20. Eaton, R.L. 1975. Puma-Mystery Cat. Pacific Search 9(10):6-8. Eaton, R.L., and K.A. Velander. 1977. Reproduction in the Puma:Biology, Behavior, and Ontogeny. World's Cats 3:45-70. Ebert, P.W. 1971. The Status and Management of the Felids of Oregon. In Jorgensen, S.E., and L.D. Mech (eds). Proc. of a Symposium on the Native Cats of North America; Their Status and Management. U.S. Dept. Int., Fish and Wildlife Service, Twin Cities, Minnesota. Pgs. 68-71. Egbert, A.L. 1987. Policies and Philosophies on Florida Panther Captive Breeding and Reintroduction. AAZPA Regional Proc.:767-772. Elmer, M., K.A. Logan, L.L. Sweanor, and M.G. Hornocker. 1997. Mountain Lion Food Habits in a Desert Environment: Preliminary Results. Page 85 in W.D. Padley, ed., Proc. Fifth Mountain Lion Workshop: 27 February- 1 March 1996; San Diego, California. Emmons, L.H. 1987. Comparative Feeding Ecology of Felids in a Neotropical Rainforest. Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol. 20:271-283.
Cooperative State Research, Education, And Extension Service (CSREES) Of USDA Information on Diversity and Pluralism at cooperative State, Research, Education, and extension service Ann Berry. Louisiana coop. ext. service, LSU. aberry@agctr.1su.edu utah. Dallas L. Holmes. utah State University. DallasH@ext.usu.edu http://www.reeusda.gov/diversity/contacts.htm
Extractions: CSREES advances knowledge for agriculture, the environment, human health and well-being, and communities through national program leadership and federal assistance. About Us buildhome("1"); Emphasis Areas buildhome("2"); Funding Opportunities buildhome("3"); Business with CSREES buildhome("4"); Newsroom buildhome("5"); National Emphasis Areas Quick Links Agricultural Systems Pest Management Research Education ... Local Extension Offices Search CSREES Web site
Planning Committee Edmund Gomez Agricultural service Center Alcalde PO Box Community Development Collegeof Eastern utah 451 East 2046 E-mail jtranel@coop.ext.colostate.edu. http://ag.arizona.edu/AREC/VAA/PlanComm.html
Extractions: WASHINGTON, DC 20006 August 11, 1980 MEMORANDUM FOR HEADS OF AGENCIES SUBJECT: Prime and Unique Agricultural Lands and the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) The accompanying memorandum on Analysis of Impacts on Prime or Unique Agricultural Lands in Implementing the National Environmental Policy Act was developed in cooperation with the Department of Agriculture. It updates and supersedes the Council's previous memorandum on this subject of August 1976. In order to review agency progress or problems in implementing this memorandum the Council will request periodic reports from federal agencies as part of our ongoing oversight of agency implementation of NEPA and the Council's regulations. At this time we would appreciate receiving from your agency by November 1, 1980, the following information: identification and brief summary of existing or proposed agency policies, regulations and other directives specifically intended to preserve or mitigate the effects of agency actions on prime or unique agricultural lands, including criteria or methodology used in assessing these impacts.
FSCPE Contacts Budget and Management 20321 Mail service Center Raleigh ndsu.nodak.edu Websitewww.ext.nodak.edu utah Mr. Robert Spendlove (E) .801) 5381550 http://www.census.gov/population/www/coop/coop.html
Ornamental And Shade Trees For Utah: A Tree Guide For McPherson, EG and Graves, GH ext Circ EC coop ext Serv utah State Univ. Logan,utah The service. May 1984. (406) 144 p. ill., maps. ISSN 0500778X. http://www.msue.msu.edu/msue/imp/modb1/00000557.html
Extractions: Urban Forestry Bibliography - 00000557 McPherson, E.G. and Graves, G.H. Ext Circ EC Coop Ext Serv Utah State Univ. Logan, Utah : The Service. May 1984. (406) 144 p. ill., maps. ISSN: 0500-778X Go To Top of File MSU Extension Home Page Main Page for this Data Base This information is for educational purposes only. References to commercial products or trade names does not imply endorsement by MSU Extension or bias against those not mentioned. This information becomes public property upon publication and may be printed verbatim with credit to MSU Extension. Reprinting cannot be used to endorse or advertise a commercial product or company. This file was generated from data base B1 on 03/09/98. Data base B1 was last revised on 05/01/96. For more information about this data base or its contents please contact heatley@msue.msu.edu . Please read our for important information about using our site.
Information About Saltcedar - Tamarix Ramosissima 1986. Habitat relationships of saltcedar (Tamarix ramosissima) in central utah.Great Basin Naturalist. 46 535541. Exp. Station, NMSU coop. ext. service. http://www.nwcb.wa.gov/weed_info/saltcedar.html
Extractions: Written Findings of the State Noxious Weed Control Board - Class A Weed Saltcedar Tamarix ramosissima Ledeb.) Family : Tamaricaceae : Tamaricaceae WA Map Images Tamarix coalition newsletter Description and Variation : Salt cedar plants are spreading shrubs or small trees, 5-20 feet tall, with numerous slender branches and small, alternate, scale-like leaves. The pale pink to white flowers are small, perfect and regular, and arranged in spike-like racemes. The distinct petals and sepals occur in fours or fives. The fruit is a capsule (Hitchcock and Cronquist 1961). Salt cedar ( Tamarix ) taxonomy is currently in a state of confusion. The number of species in the genus has fluctuated widely because members of the genus have few constant differentiating features, and taxonomists have disagreed over which features are most important. Eight species have been listed as introduced into the United States and Canada. These species can be effectively divided into two groups. Tamarix aphylla , an evergreen tree, does not sexually reproduce in this climate, so it is not seriously invasive. Deciduous, shrubby species, including
Cooperative Extension Directors 6281, 970491-6208, mgray@coop.ext.colostate.edu. OSU extension service Oregon StateUniversity 101 Ballard University extension utah State University 4900 Old http://www.colostate.edu/Orgs/WAAESD/Extension.html
Ag. Exp. Station Dir. 756180 Alaska cooperative extension service University of Director Agricultural ExperimentStation utah State University EMAIL mrewerts@coop.ext.colostate.edu, http://www.colostate.edu/Orgs/WAAESD/LOESD.html
Tourism: The Economic Impact Of Visitors To Your Community University; Antonio Santos, Northern Marianas College; Robert Gilliland, utah StateUniversity based upon work supported by the Extension service, US Department http://www.uaf.edu/coop-ext/publications/freepubs/WREP-144.html
Extractions: University of Wyoming Source: Adapted from California Economic Practices Manual (chapter 1). Impact studies that examine the economic effects within a community of development projects such as a new hotel are usually confined to a fiscal analysis of local government costs and revenues. But increasing emphasis on the total environment-social, biological, and business-calls for an appraisal of broader impacts within the community for a wholistic perspective. Economic impact studies need to provide information about the effects on jobs, income, or housing, as well as how a project will affect the community's overall environment. The effects a project has on various groups within a community (i.e. its distribution effects) are often more important than its economic efficiency. An economic impact assessment can become a useful tool for a community to use in working out what is most economically effective considering the goals for family income, distribution of benefits and costs, fiscal impacts, benefits over time, etc. The approach to setting up such a study will depend on the situation, the community, and the analyst's judgment. The study is not the final word on whether a particular choice should be made; it simply presents alternatives and their effects. The purpose of an economic study is to put some practical problems in proper perspective for a public decision-making process. Frequently, decisions must be made with less information than any community would desire.
Emeritus Spotlight: Natalie Thomas website at http//www.uaf.edu/coopext/esp an educational capacity for the cooperativeextension service. well; Indianapolis, Indiana; and Salt Lake City, utah. http://www.uaf.edu/coop-ext/esp/emeritus_spotlight2.html
Extractions: Family and Consumer Science Educator 1995 was a transition year from work into retirement. Due to a grant obtained for distance learning, I agreed to part-time work with the Alaska Cooperative Extension Service. The grant was a continuation of my doctoral emphasis as well as focused on my passion to get more distance learning opportunities to rural Alaska. The project reached across all program areas with interest from the SafeServe Food Manager Certification Training Program, the Master Gardeners, and the Fisheries program. Programs were taught via audioconference. The SafeServe Food Manager Certification Program continues and also won a spin-off grant for teaching materials from the Chancellor. Three Alaskans attended the International Distance learning Conference in March 1995 in Washington, DC. June 1996 got off to a running start teaching Master Food Preserver Volunteers how to can salmon prior to driving to Wasilla for a reunion of Extension Home Economists arranged by the Homemakers at their annual conference. It was great fun seeing retired coworkers who traveled from New Mexico, California, Oregon and South Dakota as well as Alaskans I had not seen in a long time. Jean Burand from New Mexico rode to Fairbanks to stay with us and to visit other friends during the week. We checked out all the sights since it had been twenty-two years since Jean left Alaska.
POMF 2806 Page utah coop extENSION service ATTN STEVE BROADBENT 4900 OLD MAIN HILL LOGAN UT 843224900TELEPHONE (801) 797-2196 FAX NUMBER (435) 797-4004 EMAIL STEVEB@ext. http://webwtc.opm.gov/raft/html/pomf2806.shtml
Extractions: New User About the Agency What's New Quick Index ... Career Opportunities Payroll Office Contacts for Retirement Inquiries To locate a specific item, select EDIT from the menu bar, then select FIND (on this page). In the prompt box, type the agency name, payroll office number, or other item. Each time you click "Find Next," you will get the next word on the page that matches your FIND entry. Return to Government Payroll Contacts NEW YORK NY 10017-0000 TELEPHONE (212) 490-9000 Return to Government Payroll Contac ts Page Updated: Office of Personnel Management
California Section Of The Society For Range Management Wyoming. Tom D. Whitson, coop. ext. service, Dept. Management. Neil E. West,utah State Univ., Rangeland Resources Dept. Logan, UT 843215230. http://www.casrm.org/Hawaii02.shtml
Extractions: Aston Keauhou Beach -Kahaluu II Utilizing the World Wide Web to Inform, Educate, and Market In the 21st Century Organized by Mitch Flanagan, for the SRM Information and Education Committee, and the Technology Transfer Committee (6 CEUs available for the workshop) Range Management and the Web: Partners in the 21st Century . Mike Haddock, Hale Library, Kansas State Univ., Manhattan, KS 66506-1200. Brief history of the Web; anatomy of URLs; best Web search engines; tips on searching; and evaluation of sites. So You Want to Build a Web Page?
US EPA Software For Environmental Awareness extension service www.uaf.edu/coopext/ace.html utah Department of EnvironmentalQuality www.eq.state.ut Virginia cooperative extension service www.ext.vt.edu http://www.epa.gov/seahome/farmasyst/states.htm
Extractions: Software for Environmental Awareness Serving Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin and 35 Tribes Contact Us Print Version Search: EPA Home SEAHOME Titles Topics ... Links All the links on this page are to sites outside the EPA. "Links to Web sites outside the U.S. EPA Web site are for the convenience of the user. The Standards of Ethical Conduct do not permit the U.S. EPA to endorse any private sector Web site, product, or service. The U.S. EPA does not exercise any editorial control over the information you may find at this location. This link is being provided consistent with the intended purpose of the EPA Web site." AL AK AS AZ ... WY www.uwex.edu/farmasyst
Extractions: In response to a 1984 USGA call for proposals to develop reduced-maintenance turfgrasses, a team of scientists from the University of Nebraska led by Drs. Edward Kinbacher, Terrance Riordan, and Robert Shearman began evaluating buffalograss for use as a turfgrass. Interest in water conservation and reducing chemical inputs for turfgrass culture made buffalograss a desirable choice. USGA-sponsored breeding efforts to improve buffalograss for use as a turfgrass have been very successful and have resulted in the release of eight buffalograss cultivars. As the new buffalograss cultivars entered the market, it became evident that there was a need for research to investigate fundamental management practices. After all, this was not the same buffalograss that had been growing on the Great Plains for many thousands of years, but rather this was buffalograss that had been selected for favorable turfgrass traits such as color, density, uniformity, and vigor of spread.