Learn how to keep heat from escaping from your home and cut your heating bills.
Family
Producers should do tax planning before the end of the year.
The NDSU Extension Service is conducting a research project to understand how parents perceive their child’s preparation for kindergarten.
Don’t let holiday shopping put your budget in the red.
Population projections for North Dakota indicate that the number of people age 65 and older will grow significantly by 2020.
An NDSU Extension family economics specialist provides tips to help people weather the current tough financial times.
NDSU’s Extension food and nutrition specialist wins national recognition for her newspaper column.
Approximately 80 percent of North Dakota’s elderly (65 and older) voted in 2004, compared with 52 percent of those 18 to 24.
The NDSU Extension Service has created publications to help families stretch their food dollars and eat healthful meals.
Individual operators, including youth, may apply for up to $6,000 for a two-year project grant and groups of three or more can apply for up to $18,000.
Questions and answers about breakfast and snacks that apply to children and adults.
North Dakota 4-H’ers are recognized for developing good nutrition and physical fitness habits.
Insulating foundations or basements can be one of the best ways to cut heating costs.
n farm financial management, it is generally recognized that the best measure of farm size is gross revenue, not acreage.
In 2005 (latest figures available), 13 percent of all North Dakota tax filers claimed the Earned Income Tax Credit.
NDSU Extension’s Building Connections program receives national recognition.
A new online NDSU Extension Service publication can help you determine whether the playground your children use is safe.
A combination of unusual circumstances occurred to create the lofty crop profit in 2007.
Since the university's founding in 1890, there has been a special relationship between NDSU and the people of North Dakota.
The NDSU Extension Service offers tips on stretching your food dollars.
Don’t let a foodborne illness ruin your family gathering.
How you drive and maintain your vehicle can affect your fuel usage.
North Dakota youth share their health and nutrition knowledge through posters.
North Dakota residents received $3.41 billion in personal transfer receipts in 2006, an 8.7 percent increase from $3.14 billion in 2005.
Many electronic devices contain hazardous material, so they should be disposed of properly.
Know the right way to dispose of broken compact fluorescent bulbs.
Families play an important role when it comes to food and eating.
The NDSU Extension Service will receive a grant to spread the message that consuming folic acid can help prevent birth defects.
NDSU is partnering with a private therapeutic horseback riding program to offer three new courses in therapeutic horsemanship.
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