brain games 2012

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brain games 2012

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  • 1. brain games 2012

2. Objective To reinforce key points and notable datesrelating to the history of Land Grantcolleges, the Cooperative ExtensionService, NDSU, and the NDSU ResearchExtension Centers. To provide an opportunity for Extension andREC staff and specialists to get to knowothers, interact on an informal basis. HAVE FUN. 3. Overall Rules Your Table = Your TeamDont forget to use your brain game chips!All electronics should be placed in the MIDDLE of your team table 4. MINARD HALLNDSU, 1905 5. EDGELEYSUBSTATION 6. Langdon REC Williston REC North Central REC Carrington RECMain Station Dickinson REC Central Grasslands REC Hettinger REC 7. WILLISTONRESEARCH EXTENSION CENTER 8. HETTINGERRESEARCH EXTENSION CENTER 9. LANGDONRESEARCH EXTENSION CENTER 10. NORTH CENTRALRESEARCH EXTENSION CENTER, MINOT 11. CARRINGTONRESEARCH EXTENSION CENTER 12. CENTRAL GRASSLANDSRESEARCH EXTENSION CENTER, STREETER 13. MORRILL ACTANNIVERSARY 14. 1900sPhilip Chandler, hog raising contest 15. Clarence Shatz,Acre Corn Contest1914 16. M.B.JohnsonNDs 1stCountyAgentBottineau1912 17. Model T Fold Torpedo 10 Roadster 18. Ward County Agent Mr. Peck said he does not believe in riding in a Ford car,so this year he bought a "Grant". 19. Hunter, ND Boys and Girls Club 1913 20. Farm Boys Camp at Mandan, ND 21. Thomas Cooper19141st director ofCooperativeExtension 22. Canning Class 23. Home Economics ExtensionState Staff - 1928 24. Group of County Agent 1929 25. Grasshopper bait mixer designed and built by the Ag Engineering Dept. 26. 1930 Cotton mattresses made for the poor 27. Volunteer workersduring WWII 28. ND 4-HDelegates4-H National Camp,WashingtonD.C. 29. North DakotaDemonstration4-H Team going toRegional Contest 30. North DakotaState 4-H ChampionDemonstrationTeam 31. Extensions Home Economics Stateand County staff 1961-62 32. Arthur Schultz presents T.V. programs on farmstead layout and house plans . 33. Today 34. Sources www.ndsu.edu http://www.flickr.com/photos/ndsu-university-archives/ http://digitalhorizonsonline.org/cdm4/results.php?CISOOP1=all&CISOBOX1=Extension&CISOFIELD1=CISOSEARCHALL&CISOOP2=all&CISOBOX2=north+dakota+agricultural+college+%28fargo%2C+n.d.%29&CISOFIELD2=creato&CISOROOT=all&t=s 35. BRAIN GAME100 Point DropTo Play It: Teams wager the number of points (up to 100 points, inincrements of 10) it wishes to wager on that topic. Correct answers will be rewarded with the wagered pointsand incorrect answers will be deducted that number of points. When time begins, the teams remove the card with thequestions from the envelope and begin answering by clearlycircling the correct answer. Unanswered questions will be counted as incorrect. 36. 100 Point Drop The 1862 Morrill ActWhen you hear the BUZZER, begin answeringquestions.When you hear the next BUZZER, STOPanswering questions. 37. Answers The 1862 Morrill ActPresident Abraham Lincoln signed the Legislation was signed to create the U.S.Morrill Act into law.Department of Agriculture on May 15, 1862.The Morrill Act was signed into law onJuly 2, 1862.The Morrill Act was first proposed in 1857 and passed by Congress in 1859In addition to the signature of thebut was vetoed President JamesPresident, the act is signed by theBuchanan.Speaker of the House ofRepresentatives and President of the The two privately owned and operatedSenate, pro temporeinstitutions in the original system are MIT and Cornell University.The first state to accept the provisionsof the Morrill Act was Iowa. The total amount of acres given to North Dakota under the Morrill Act to The first land grant college newlybe used, or the proceeds from itscreated under the Morrill Act wassale, to be used toward establishing andKansas State.funding the land grant institution was 90,000 acres. 38. 100 Point Drop The History of ND RECsWhen you hear the BUZZER, begin answeringquestions.When you hear the next BUZZER, STOPanswering questions. 39. Answers The History of ND RECsIn 1887, the Hatch Act createsthe NCREC under control of theAgricultural Experiment Stations. NDAC providing for a Board ofThe first Ag. Experiment substation Visitors.to be created was the EdgelyIn 1945, 100 acres of land wereSubstation.donated to the Dickinson REC byOf the original buildings at thelocal ranchers/farmers forHettinger REC, the following stilllivestock research.stand: Farm House and Horse Barn. After the Williston REC wasCavalier County is known as therelocated in 1954, the 80 acresCanola Capital of the USA. retained by the state became theOne serving (1 cup) of juneberries site of Williston State College.contains 27% of the Percent DailyProperty of all of the branch stationsValue for Vitamin C. except those in Carrington andHB 66 created and establishedStreeter was donated to the state by local communities. 40. 100 Point Drop The History of ND County AgentsWhen you hear the BUZZER, begin answeringquestions.When you hear the next BUZZER, STOPanswering questions. 41. Answers The History of ND County AgentsBefore Extension was created by theND Governor William Guys father was1914 Smith Lever Act, North Dakota had a ND County Agent and County Agentcounty agents that were hired and paid Supervisor.by the Better Farming Association.ND Governor William Guy was anThe first County Agent was M.B. Assistant Cass County Agent in 1947.Johnson. He was placed in BottineauCounty. Only five county agents have served Williams County with respective tenuresDickey, McKenzie, Morton, and Towner of 5, 8.5, 16, 38, and 31 years.have had continuous county agentservice since 1914-1915. In 1997, the language in the North Dakota Century Code edited so allWalter Mattson, Golden Valley County references to county agent or countyhas had the longest tenure of anyagent work were replaced tocounty agent in one county in Northextension agent or extension agentDakota at 41 years.work. 42. 100 Point Drop The History of ND 4-HWhen you hear the BUZZER, begin answeringquestions.When you hear the next BUZZER, STOPanswering questions. 43. Answers The History of ND 4-HThe first State Club Agent was HelenJ. Sullivan was appointed in 1915. The first State 4-H Citizenship Shortcourse was held in JanuaryDirector Randlett discontinued all 1973.club agent titles and placed theresponsibility for youth work with the The organization of the North Dakotacounty agent in 1922.4-H Ambassadors happened in 1970.Counties to send delegates to theInfirst National 4-H Club Camp in 1927 1944, Cass, Barnes, Ransom, Richlandwere Pembina, Barnes, Richland, andand SaragentCass Counties. (Traill, Steele, LaMoure, and Dickey Counties later became members ofIn 1932, the first girl to win the the association) obtained 138 acresNational 4-H Stock judging contest of land. It became known as Thewas won by Jean (Leake) Baeder of Sandhills Camp. 44. 100 Point DropThe History of ND Family & Consumer SciencesWhen you hear the BUZZER, begin answeringquestions.When you hear the next BUZZER, STOPanswering questions. 45. Answers The History of ND Family & Consumer SciencesBy 1934, 6 counties had Extension Home As early as 1914, Extension wasEconomists. concerned about the lunches of schoolchildren, so they published a bulletinThe first home demonstration leader was called The Rural Hot Lunch.May McDonald who worked from 1915-1918.Homemakers Club were officially organized in 1922 with 48 groups organized by Extension.Three emergency home demonstrationagents who helped set a foundation forfuture county home economists were Between the 1991-1992 and 1992-1993from Barnes, Divide, and Burleigh. club years, the Homemakers Club officially change to FCE clubs.Agents with a specialty in the FCS areahave been known by at least 4 different Barnes County has the best record fortitles. They include: Homecontinuous county agent and homeDemonstration Agent, Home economist work: a home economistEconomist, Extension Agent, and FCS started September 16, 1917.Agent 46. 100 Point DropHistory of ND Extension CommunicationsWhen you hear the BUZZER, begin answeringquestions.When you hear the next BUZZER, STOPanswering questions. 47. Answers History of ND Extension CommunicationsThree Extension publications were System (EMIS), and ND used the Stateissued before 1914? EMIS (SEMIS) used which provided aunified planning and reporting format.From 1914 to about 1940, Extensionissued fewer than 6 new publications AGNET terminals were in place inper year.county offices by 1982 and used until 1987. More than 5,000 electronic mailDuring the 1920s, radio broadcasts with messages were transmitted each yearscientific education were transmitted at the terminals were used.the NDAC courtesy of the ExtensionService from Ladd Hall.The first NDSU Extension Service sitewas linked to the USDA in June 1995.In the late 1930s Morton County AgentRalph Newcomer was one of the first A person had to go through 9 lessons toagents to try radio broadcasts. become a Master Internet Volunteerand give back 30 hours of service to theIn 1969, the first computer program for community.Extension, the Extension Management 48. 100 Point DropFun ND Extension FactsWhen you hear the BUZZER, begin answeringquestions.When you hear the next BUZZER, STOPanswering questions. 49. Answers Fun ND Extension FactsThe World War II Liberty Ship wasnamed after which ND ExtensionThe monthly FNP newsletter, containingWorker: Arthur A. Penn, Dickey County. shopping tips, nutritional informationand healthy recipes, is called FoodIn 1994, the current MPU model forWise.Extension was first piloted in unit 2 andunit 6. Myron Johnsrud, NDSU ExtensionService director, went on to be theNDs first Extension Agronomist started national Extension leader with USDA.on August 1, 1927 and was named E.G.Booth.The first Extension Director who wasborn and raised in North Dakota wasA Sugarbeet specialist added to the Arthur Herman Schulz fromExtension Staff in 1969.Marion, ND.NDSU has had only one of the RodentControl Specialists. 50. BRAIN GAMETimeline Trivia Write your answers to the questions orstatements on each of the 7 colored game cards. Tape each card onto the square connecting theevent written in bold type on the card to thecorrect date on the timeline. Remember to record your table number andteam members names of the back of this gamesheet. 51. TIME REMAINING00 10 00 09 59Hours15263748 1 2 3 4MinutesSeconds 52. TIME REMAINING00 09 008 59Hours15263748 1 2 3 4MinutesSeconds 53. TIME REMAINING00 08 007 59Hours15263748 1 2 3 4MinutesSeconds 54. TIME REMAINING00 07 006 59Hours15263748 1 2 3 4MinutesSeconds 55. TIME REMAINING00 06 005 59Hours15263748 1 2 3 4MinutesSeconds 56. TIME REMAINING00 05 004 59Hours15263748 1 2 3 4MinutesSeconds 57. TIME REMAINING00 04 003 59Hours15263748 1 2 3 4MinutesSeconds 58. TIME REMAINING00 03 002 59Hours15263748 1 2 3 4MinutesSeconds 59. TIME REMAINING00 02 001 59Hours15263748 1 2 3 4MinutesSeconds 60. TIME REMAINING00 01 000 59Hours15263748 1 2 3 4MinutesSeconds 61. 1960The name of the North Dakota AgriculturalCollege is changed to North Dakota State University.During NDSUs history, the athletic teams have beenknown by 3 different names. What are the 3 names?FARMERS, AGGIES, & BISONBuried under the lawn at the Engineering &Technology building is a noted Jersey cow.What is the full name of this cow? NOBLES GOLDEN MARGUERITE 62. BRAIN GAME Name that Picture! See the picture, write the answer. 63. Name That Picture150th Anniversary of the Morrill Act{15 pictures of extension now, then and more NDSU 64. 1. These original three buildings (residence, horse barnand seed house) were built in 1909 at this REC when itbegan its work. 65. 2.What REC does this building belong to? *Bonus point if you know the buildings name. 66. 3. This REC was established in 1907 along the Little Muddy Creek. In 1953 a college established here. 67. 4.This REC was established in 1905. The center currentlyoperates on 4,916 acres. 68. 5. This REC was established in 1909, essentially as a dairy station. 69. 5. This REC was established in 1909, essentially as a dairy station. 70. 6. This REC was approved in 1957 and started in around 1960 71. 7.This newer REC was opened in 1977 and is located in the Coteau area of North Dakota. 72. 8. Name that experiment station 73. 9.This educator, reformer, and farmer, was the geniusbehind the Morrill Act. 74. 10.Name that crop 75. 11. This U.S. Representative and Senator was the chief sponsor of the 1862 & 1890 Land-Grant Acts. 76. 12. Which NDSU campus building is it? 77. 13.What is this apparatus used for? 78. 14. Which NDSU campus building is it? 79. 15.What we now call classes andprogramming, county agents used toput on these instead. 80. How did you do?! 81. 1. The Langdon REC was established in 1909. 82. 2. The Vic Sturlaugson Learning Center at the NDSU Langdon REC. 83. 3. Williston REC 84. 4. Dickinson Research Extension Center 85. 5.Hettinger Research Extension Center.In 1940 the focus turned to sheep. Today it has one of the largest state-owned sheep herds in the U.S. 86. 6. Carrington REC 87. 7. Central Grasslands Research Extension Center near Streeter, ND 88. 8. North Central REC, Minot 89. 9. Jonathan Baldwin Turner 1805-1899 90. 10.Alfalfa 91. 11.Justin S. Morrill 1810-1898 92. 12.Morrill Hall, NDAC 1930s 93. 13.Canning 94. 14.Bentson-Bunker Fieldhouse, 1940s 95. 15.Short Courses 96. A Look into the PastPictures courtesy of the NDSU Archives 97. NDAC vs UND 98. Campus Gates, March 1922 99. Haile Chisolm, Blacksmith 1924 100. They come runnin just as fast as they can,Cause every girl crazy bout a sharp dressed manGroup of County Agents at the Williston REC, July 1929 101. NDSU Dairy Barn 1913Studies regarding Red Clover ensilage were being done in one of the silos. 102. "On one of Mr. Pecks (county agent) Demonstrations. The alfalfa on the right was grown according to hisdirections, while that on the left was put in by thefarmer according to his ideas. 103. Miss Helen Sullivan teaching about canning and preserving. 104. Women judging home canned food. 105. Eighty-five delegates of the NorthDakota Extension Homemakers Council met June 3-7, 1941 at the Good LuckCamp, Lake Metigoshe, N.D. 106. Thank you to the NDSUUniversity Archives forthe use of all the photos. 107. NDSU 108. brain gamesAward winners 2012 109. References Agricultural Experiment Station and Agriculture Research Extension Centers (2008). Retrievedfrom: http://history.nd.gov/archives/stateagencies/agricextension.html Bale, S.W. (1989).Hired Hands and Volunteers: A history of North Dakota Extension Service. Bergman, J. (personal communication, October 9, 2012) Fisher, J. (personal communication, November 2, 2012) Flage, L. (Interviewee, November 2012) Froelich, M. (Interviewee, November 2012) Hauge, L. (Interviewee, November 2012) Hoines, V. (personal communication, November 1, 2012) Mehloff, R. (personal communication, September 26, 2012) Monson, K. (Interviewee, November 2012) Neville, B. (personal communication, October 30, 2012) Oderman, J. (personal communication, October 21, 2012) Scharmer, L. (Interviewee, October 2012) Schauer, C. (personal communication, October 16, 2012) Schatz, B. (personal communication, October 12, 2012)