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Arkansas students win Soybean Science Challenge awards at seven regional and state science fairs; Stuttgart s Sydney Fuller among recipients
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Soybean seeds are available for free | Pine Bluff Commercial News
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RETURNING CHAMPION Alyssa Butler, a 17-year-old senior at Carlisle High School in Carlisle, Arkansas won both her regional-level competition in the Arkansas Soybean Science Challenge, competing in the virtual Central Arkansas Regional Science and Engineering Fair on March 5, and the state-level competition at the virtual Southwestern Energy Arkansas State Science and Engineering Fair on April 1. This was Butler’s second consecutive win at the state level. (Division of Agriculture photo.)
Alyssa Butler, a 17-year-old senior at Carlisle High School in Carlisle, Arkansas, has had quite a spring.
Butler first won her regional-level competition in the Arkansas Soybean Science Challenge, competing in the virtual Central Arkansas Regional Science and Engineering Fair on March 5. Butler then went on to win the state-level competition at the virtual Southwestern Energy Arkansas State Science and Engineering Fair on April 1. This was Butler’s second consecutive win a
IT’S GROW TIME Schools and community gardens can get free soybean seeds through the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture Cooperative Extension Service’s Grow Your Own Protein program as long as they donate their produce to schools, churches, food pantries, or other nonprofits serving food-insecure populations. (Division of Agriculture photo.)
LITTLE ROCK For gardeners looking for an easy-to-grow addition to their gardens, soybeans are a natural powerhouse: they’re easy to grow, they nourish the soil, and they provide a complete protein.
Right now, schools and community gardens can get free soybean seeds through the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture Cooperative Extension Service’s Grow Your Own Protein program as long as they donate their produce to schools, churches, food pantries, or other nonprofits serving food-insecure populations.