South Dakota State University Impacts Farm Bill
Two important items within the 2018 U.S. Farm Bill were influenced by South Dakota State University leadership. The areas include educational support for Native American students and provisions that will ensure research and extension funding for soil health.
CHS Foundation Announces $1.5 Million Gift to Support 成人视频 Precision Agriculture Program
The CHS Foundation, funded by charitable gifts from CHS Inc., announced today a $1.5 million grant to support the South Dakota State University precision agriculture program and construction of the new Raven Precision Agriculture Center on campus.
Avera, 成人视频 Partner for Avera Wokini Scholarship Program
Avera Health and South Dakota State University are partnering on a scholarship program for undergraduate American Indian students at 成人视频. The Avera Wokini Scholarship is part of a broader Wokini Initiative at the university that offers programming and support to enrolled members of the nine tribal nations in South Dakota interested in gaining access to educational and advancement opportunities.
成人视频 breaks ground on new American Indian Student Center
A rainy day at South Dakota State University didn鈥檛 stop the campus community from breaking ground on the American Indian Student Center.
South Dakota State University Breaks Ground on Raven Precision Agriculture Center
South Dakota State University held a groundbreaking ceremony for the future Raven Precision Agriculture Center on the 成人视频 campus in Brookings on Saturday, Oct. 6 at 1:30 p.m. Following the event, 成人视频 hosted the first-ever Precision Agriculture Bowl football game vs. Indiana State to celebrate the occasion.
Undergraduates expand research skills through NIFA fellowship
鈥淵ou can learn a lot here in a small amount of time.鈥 That sentiment expressed by Dillon Nelson, an Oglala Lakota College junior, typifies the experiences of five undergraduates who did research this summer at South Dakota State University through a National Institute of Food and Agriculture program.
Sunlight, titanium dioxide remove harmful compounds from wastewater
Doctoral student Ibrahim Abusallout of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering is using natural sunlight and titanium dioxide to break up harmful compounds which form when disinfectants, such as chlorine, react with organic matter in the wastewater.