Scientists 'Hatch' Hew Foods In Schools' Agriculture Labs WASHINGTON - Some of E.M. Buck’s colleagues wanted to call his tasty, battered, breaded, deep fried product “squish balls.” But Buck had a better idea for the “trash-fish” food he had developed from red hake and squid in his University of Massachusetts- Amherst laboratory. He called it “ocean nuggets.” At the University of Alaska- Fairbanks, Alan Epps has a similar problem as he tries to figure out how to produce and market reindeer sausage. He wonders whether everyone would be better off if reindeer meat were called “Alaskan venison” instead. Law Still Thrives Both Buck and Epps are beneficiaries of a federal program that is still going strong in its centennial year. The Hatch Act of 1887 set up agricultural ex periment stations at land-grant colleges in each of the nation’s states and territories and provided them with money for research on local, regional, and sometimes national agricultural problems. The Hatch Act system has come under occasional attack; the Carter administration, for example, tried to replace its for mula funding process with a competitive-grant method. But Congress resisted, as it has con sistently, and restated its support of the Hatch Act in the 1981 farm bill. Today, the Hatch Act continues to provide money for agricultural research on problems large and small, from basic questions about how the mammary glands of dairy animals secrete milk to practical matters such as how to use soybeans or maple sugar in making yogurt. Federal financing amounted to $148.8 million in each of the past I . BLACK! 2. RED 3. Y BUOW 4-. BLUE 5. BROWN rHaVSLVBTfiNT: TM£ MMe"\/et varfiA/f/9 M/FUMD/M6. fT/SMTM QMT, tr/Bftu/#sp. TMaza PFTS QRSFOOMP TMROOOF ovrweus especwum 7M£SOOTf~/UJ£sr TMt COM3/N£P 577M6 OFfi L&R6F OF7BRM/MFD #MTfiNPPPJfIPP£?R£ JuSTfiBOUrBQUAO 7t/£ SWG OP7H6&MMSW/K two years; the Reagan ad ministration is asking for $155.5 million for the coming fiscal year. The money, in the Agriculture Department budget, is distributed bu busdn Vermillion If you get all the questions in this quiz nght consider your; a real ant whiz Remember some questions have more than one answer 1 Ants have A. 4 B. 6. C. 8 2 There are ants A. 6 B. 600 C. 6000 .3 Ants use their feelers to A. communicate with other ants B. taste and feel 4 Ants bieathe air througl A. tiny holes in their heads B holes in the sides of their abdomens, C. their mouths 5 The first ants lived almost A. one thousand years ago, B. one million years ago, C. 100 million years ago 6 Ant colonies build their homes A. in wood, B. in leaves they weave together. C. in under ground tunnels, D. in mudballs on trees, E. nowhere—they just wander 6. PEACM 7 . GREEN 8. LT BROWN 9 . LT BLUE 10. LT. GREEN to 58 agricultural experiment stations one in each state and territory except for additional stations in New York and Con necticut that existed before the legs kinds ol /» w? 7- 23-'£7 7 A queen ant is the most important ant in a colony because A. she doe's all the work of building the nest, B. she is the mother of the other ants C. she gathers the food 8 Ants can be from 1 of an > inch (1 mm) to _ long A. one inch (2 5 cm), B. two inches (5 cm), MKWnjJys C. three inches (7 5 cm' [ Answers v (II )(. B S il ! iw |» P'liß M(j uu hiiijiu xi i] pun >'u ||V <) •) t qf q [>m> y nu n*u n « )sip Bui >q up ‘uolu pup) 3p qj Hatch Act was passed according to a formula that takes into ac count a state’s population, the percentage of its rural population, and the percentage that is engaged in agriculture. States and territories are required at least to match the federal funds, but many contribute (Turn to Page B 12) 9 Ants are most closely i elated to A. spiders, B. beetles C. bees and wasps 10 Colonies of ants are found A. in almost all parts of the world, B. mainly in warm climates, C. mainly in cold climates DM\Mnq by John Hut j hneryctrth 4*> ic /