Re: RODALE COLLABORATION (PLEASE EXCUSE THE

mailto:RBAIRSTOW.parti@PARTI.INFORUM.ORG
Thu, 2 Nov 1995 09:03:07 -0500

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Date:         Thu, 2 Nov 1995 09:03:07 -0500
From: mailto:RBAIRSTOW.parti@PARTI.INFORUM.ORG>
Subject:      Re: RODALE COLLABORATION (PLEASE EXCUSE THE
To: Multiple recipients of list DEVEL-L <mailto:DEVEL-L@AMERICAN.EDU>

CROSS POSTINGS)
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Message 95.23321 by RBAIRSTOW on Nov. 2, 1995 at 08:47, about mailto:[SANET-MG@CES.NCSU.EDU]! RODALE COLLABORATION (0 notes).

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Rodale Institute 611 Siegfriedale Rd., Kutztown, PA 19530 Tel: (610) 683-1400 Fax: (610) 683-8548 ____________________________________

November 2, 1995

Rodale Institute is soliciting collaboration with U.S. Land Grant University faculty members in soil science, agronomy, rural sociology, agricultural economics, and others interested in working on soil management research in Guatemala and/or Senegal through the Institute's projects in those countries.

This collaboration would occur as part of the Soil Management Collaborative Research Support Program (SM-CRSP). Work in Senegal and Guatemala supported by the SM-CRSP is required to be relevant as well to the U.S. The timeframe for submission of a five-page preproposal is November 17th.

Rodale Institute has a number of assets which could be useful in such a collaboration. These include, among others:

* Our projects in Senegal, a semi-arid tropical environment, and in northern Guatemala, a humid, tropical lowland environment. These projects have established strong working relationships with national research institutes, national extension services, more than 100 farming communities, and other non-government and multilateral institutions. The projects provide an excellent infrastructure through which to conduct applied research on soil management that is relevant and accessible to farming communities.

* A 15-year old farming systems trial at the Rodale Institute in eastern Pensylvania that has compared conventional to manure-based/legume corn-soybean-small grain systems, with good results to date in terms of comparable yields and differences in soil quality.

* A four-year old compost utilization trial (CUT) at the Institute using seven management treatments covering 28 acres, and monitored with 68 lysimeters.

* Significant publishing and information exchange capacity.

Interested faculty members may contact Jonathon Landeck, Global Program Director, by telephone (610-683-1475) or at the following email address, as soon as possible:

mailto:jlandeck.inbox@parti.inforum.org

Thank you for your interest.

Jonathon Landeck Global Programs Director Rodale Institute