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NDSU athlete from Minnesota has scholarship revoked over offensive TikToks

NDSU athlete from Minnesota has scholarship revoked over offensive TikToks Noah Cvetnic is a transfer from the University of Minnesota. Author: A North Dakota State University track and field athlete had his scholarship offer revoked after he posted offensive videos on TikTok. First reported by the NDSU student newspaper The Spectrum, Noah Cvetnic, a transfer from the University of Minnesota, posted a series of videos on TikTok that gained attention after they were posted by a campus Black Lives Matter Instagram page. In the videos, Cvetnic jokes about campus sexual assault, pedophilia, drug use and other topics. Cvetnic will reportedly not compete for NDSU or receive the athletic scholarship he was originally offered.

KBHB Radio - Strategies to manage herds during drought include well-developed culling plan

Strategies to manage herds during drought include well-developed culling plan NDSU Extension FARGO, ND – Weather forecasts  predict worsening drought conditions in the northern Great Plains for the 2021 growing season, which is bad news for cattle producers. Many cattle operations will find themselves without enough forage and feedstuffs to maintain their current herd size. “Unfortunately, often decisions are made more with emotion than logic during stressful times,” says Lisa Pederson, Extension livestock specialist at North Dakota State University’s Central Grasslands Research Extension Center near Streeter. Photo UNL Extension Producers have several strategies to manage herds with limited feed resources, including developing a culling plan.

Follow these guidelines when applying potash

iamporpla/Getty Images APPLY WHERE NEEDED: Many Indiana soils need potash. However, research trials indicate applying too much too close to planting can hurt both corn and soybean yields. Yield loss has been documented when too much potash is applied too close to planting. Suggested Event Jun 15, 2021 to Jun 17, 2021 Whoever coined the phrase “everything in moderation” was onto a principle that is still often good advice today. Jim Camberato, Purdue University Extension soil fertility specialist, and Shaun Casteel, Purdue Extension soybean specialist, both say it is good policy when planning your fertilizer application strategies. Many fields in Indiana need potash, especially in high-yield situations, Camberato acknowledges. The best way to find out is through a routine soil-testing program. Lately, however, Casteel and researchers elsewhere have documented that hefty applications of potash shortly before planting corn or soybeans can cause inj

Shaw: Kudos to Gov Doug Burgum, and a fond farewell to former VP Walter Mondale

North Dakota lawmakers have wrapped up the session Here s a rundown of what they did in Bismarck

Major issues emerged during North Dakota s 2021 legislative session. Here s a rundown From inter-branch power struggles to coal industry tax breaks, the North Dakota Legislature stepped into a vast range of issues during its 2021 session. Written By: Jeremy Turley | Adam Willis | 7:45 pm, Apr. 30, 2021 × North Dakota Senate Majority Leader Rich Wardner, R-Dickinson, speaks at a bill signing on April 21, 2021, next to Gov. Doug Burgum, left, and House Majority Leader Chet Pollert, R-Carrington. Jeremy Turley / Forum News Service BISMARCK North Dakota lawmakers are heading home after nearly four months of work at the state Capitol in Bismarck. Both chambers of the Republican-dominated Legislature ended their biennial regular session just after midnight on Friday, April 30, but the effects of the more than 500 laws they made will be felt by North Dakotans for years to come.

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