Academic literature on the topic 'Garden Club of America'

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Journal articles on the topic "Garden Club of America"

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Huang, Terry. "The British Garden." Sibbaldia: the International Journal of Botanic Garden Horticulture, no. 13 (November 10, 2015): 153–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.24823/sibbaldia.2015.81.

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The Royal Horticultural Society/Garden Club of America Interchange Fellowship was established in 1952 and is awarded to one American and one British student annually. It was formerly known as the Martin McLaren Scholarship and was created to help encourage the exchange of ideas and information in the horticultural world. Terry Huang was selected as the American 2013–2014 Royal Interchange Fellow. His travels and placements solidified for him the important role that botanic and public gardens play as interpreters of the plant world. He describes some of his experiences and examples of excellence that he saw while in Britain. He goes on to explain that the work placements have influenced and inspired the work he does today in the Botany Greenhouse at the University of Washington.
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Leach, Mark. "The Garden Club of America Fellowship in Ecological Restoration." Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 85, no. 4 (October 2004): 136. http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/0012-9623(2004)85[136:tgcoaf]2.0.co;2.

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Armstrong, Gregory D. "The Garden Club of America Awards Fellowship in Ecological Restoration." Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 84, no. 4 (October 2003): 149. http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/0012-9623(2003)84[149b:tgcoaa]2.0.co;2.

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Leach, Mark. "Fellowship in Ecological Restoration to Be Awarded by the Garden Club of America." Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 86, no. 4 (October 2005): 202. http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/0012-9623(2005)86[202:fiertb]2.0.co;2.

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Odom, Mary Lou. "Review Essay :The Power of One: Truth amid Triumph in Women’s Literacy." College Composition & Communication 60, no. 3 (February 1, 2009): W49—W62. http://dx.doi.org/10.58680/ccc20096977.

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Our Sisters’ Keepers: Nineteenth-Century Benevolence Literature by American Women edited by Jill Bergman and Debra Bernardi; From the Garden Club: Rural Women Writing Community by Charlotte Hogg; Whistlin; Women of Appalachia: Literacy Practices Since College by Katherine Kelleher Sohn
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Lamba, Baldev, and Grace Chapman. "Teaching Sustainable Design: A Hands-on Interdisciplinary Model." HortTechnology 20, no. 3 (June 2010): 487–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/horttech.20.3.487.

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Students and instructors from the Department of Landscape Architecture and Horticulture, located on the Temple University Ambler Campus, collaborated on the design and construction of an exhibit for the 2009 Bella Italia Philadelphia Flower Show. The design of the exhibit, inspired by Italian traditions, promoted sustainable principles and practices through the use of indigenous and recycled materials and conservation of natural resources. Temple University's exhibit received five awards, including the American Horticultural Society Environmental Award and the Garden Club Federation of Pennsylvania Award for Conservation. This article documents the interdisciplinary and hands-on teaching model used in creating and implementing a sustainable design, as well as the results of the follow-up student surveys about the lessons learned and public responses to the exhibit.
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Gural-Sverlova, Nina, and Roman Gural. "Phenotypic markers and history of the introduction of white-lipped snail Cepaea hortensis (Gastropoda, Helicidae) in western regions of Ukraine." Proceedings of the State Natural History Museum, no. 38 (February 1, 2023): 83–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.36885/nzdpm.2022.38.83-94.

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The dependence of the introduction history of Cepaea hortensis in the western regions of Ukraine and the phenotypic variability of this species, concerning the shell and body colouration, is analysed. In areas inhabited by descendants of the primary introduction (most likely, the second half of the 20th century, but not later than the 1970s) no more than three main variants of shell colouration are observed: yellow or white unbanded, white banded. There is also no variability in the body colouration; all snails have a light body, without gray or reddish pigment. The most characteristic feature of such colonies, which can serve as a phenotypic marker, is the presence of dark spiral bands only on white shells. An analysis of photographs from different parts of the present range of C. hortensis, significantly expanded due to anthropochory, made it possible to find out that shells with a white ground colour and especially white banded shells are found in different countries of Europe and North America. However, white is not the only colouration variant of the banded shells there. Conversely, yellow banded shells are one of the typical colouration variants in different parts of the range of C. hortensis. Recently, at some sites of Western Ukraine, colonies of C. hortensis with a different phenotypic composition have begun to be found, formed as a result of repeated introductions of this species, which pass through various garden centres. Such colonies are characterized by the presence of yellow banded and sometimes also pink shells as well as by a more or less pronounced variability in body colouration. The most interesting is the presence at some sites of Lviv and its environs of a rare hereditary trait that is only locally found in the natural range of C. hortensis, namely, the dark lip in some adults. At sites with the presence of such a feature, all pink and single yellow shells have a dark lip. We found out that the spreading of carriers of this trait occurs through the garden centre "Club of Plants", located near Lviv (Pidbirtsi). At the same time, at some sites of Lviv and its environs, where pink shells were also found, all of them had a light lip, characteristic of C. hortensis. This indicates that repeated introductions of C. hortensis, even within the same Lviv, not only pass-through different garden centres, but also have different origins.
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Watermeier, Daniel J., and Ron Engle. "The Dawison-Booth Polyglot Othello." Theatre Research International 13, no. 1 (1988): 48–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0307883300014231.

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Fifty years ago, the renowned American humorist, Don Marquis, creator of the ‘Archy and Mehitabel’ stories, sat in the dining room of the Players Club and contemplated a playbill: ‘Mr. Bogumil Dawison will appear at the Winter Garden as Othello. Mr. Edwin Booth will play Iago.’ Who was Bogumil Dawison, he wonders? Why did his name appear at the top of the bill above Booth's? Perhaps he had a European reputation like Salvini or Coquelin, but if so why had Marquis never heard of him? He could not have been a Nobody, Marquis concludes, otherwise Booth would never have acted with him. Marquis thinks that perhaps he should find out all he can about Dawison, but then decides that he'll have another brandy instead: ‘Damn Bogumil Dawison! Maybe he was a bad actor, he mooned around and drank himself to death, because the wind was cold and wet … a ridiculous person undoubtedly, and I don't want to know his ghost.’
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González-Gallegos, Jesús Guadalupe. "Salvia ramamoorthyana and S. omissa (Lamiaceae), two names for two old and largely confused species from Mexico." Phytotaxa 236, no. 3 (December 1, 2015): 215. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.236.3.2.

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Bentham, G. (1832–1836) Labiatarum genera et species. Ridgeway, London, 783 pp.Bentham, G. (1848) Labiatae. In: Candolle, A. de (Ed.) Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis. Victor Masson, Paris, pp. 27–603.Briquet, J. (1898) Fragmenta monographiea Labiatarum, fasciculus V, observations sur quelques Labiées intéressantes ou nouvelles principalement de L’Herbier Delessert. Annuaire du Conservatoire et du jardins botaniques de Genève 2: 102–251.Cornejo-Tenorio, G. & Ibarra-Manríquez, G. (2011) Diversidad y distribución del género Salvia (Lamiaceae) en Michoacán, México. Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad 82: 1279–1296.Epling, C. (1939) A revision of Salvia subgenus Calosphace. Feddes Repertorium Specierum Novarum Regni Vegetabilis 110: 1–383.Epling, C. (1940) Supplementary notes on American Labiatae. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 67: 509–534. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2480972Epling, C. (1941) Supplementary notes on American Labiatae-II. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 68: 552–568. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2481456Epling, C. (1944) Supplementary notes on American Labiataae-III. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 71: 484–497. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2481241Epling, C. (1947) Supplementary notes on American Labiatae-IV. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club 74: 512–518. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2481876Epling, C. (1951) Supplementary notes on American Labiatae-V. Brittonia 7: 129–142. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2804702Epling, C. (1960) Supplementary notes on American Labiatae-VII. Brittonia 12: 140–150. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2805214Epling, C. & Játiva, C. (1963) Supplementary notes on American Labiatae-VIII. Brittonia 15: 366–376. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2805381Epling, C. & Játiva, C. (1966) Supplementary notes on American Labiatae-IX. Brittonia 18: 255–265. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2805366Epling, C. & Játiva, C. (1968) Supplementary notes on American Labiatae-X. Brittonia 20: 295–313. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2805687Epling, C. & Mathias, M.E. (1957) Supplementary notes on American Labiatae-VI. Brittonia 8: 297–313. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2804980Espejo Serna, A. & Ramamoorthy, T.P. (1993) Revisión taxonómica de Salvia sección Sigmoideae (Lamiaceae). Acta Botanica Mexicana 23: 65–102.Fernald, M.L. (1900) A synopsis of the Mexican and Central American species of Salvia. Contributions from the Gray Herbarium of Harvard University 19: 490–556. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/25129966González-Gallegos, J.G. & Castro-Castro, A. (2013) New insights on Salvia platyphylla (Lamiaceae) and description of S. pugana and S. albiterrarum, two new species from Jalisco, Mexico. Phytotaxa 93 (2): 47–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.93.2.1González-Gallegos, J.G. & Gama-Villanueva, O.J. (2013) Resurrection of Salvia species (Lamiaceae) recently synonymized in Flora Mesoamericana. Phytotaxa 151 (1): 1–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.151.1.1González-Gallegos, J.G., Vázquez-García, J.A. & Cházaro-Basáñez, M.J. (2013) Salvia carreyesii, Salvia ibugana and Salvia ramirezii (Lamiaceae), three new species from Jalisco, Mexico. Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad 84: 7–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.7550/rmb.29131Hemsley, W.B. (1881–1882) Botany vol. II. In: Godman, D. & Salvin, O. (Eds.) Biologia centrali-americana. R. H. Porter and Dulau & Co., London, pp. 621.Jenks, A.A., Walker, J.B. & Kim, S.-C. (2013) Phylogeny of New World Salvia subgenus Calosphace (Lamiaceae) based on cpDNA (psbA-trnH) and nrDNA (ITS) sequence data. Journal of Plant Research 126: 483–496. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10265-012-0543-1Klitgaard, B. (2012) Salvia L. In: Davidse, G., Sousa, -S.M., Knapp, S. & Chiang, F. (Eds.) Flora Mesoamericana 4(2), Rubiaceae a Verbenaceae. Missouri Botanical Press, St. Louis, pp. 396–424.Kunth, C.S. (1817) Nova genera et species plantarum. The Greek-Latin-Germanic Library, Paris, 404 pp.Linnaeus, C. (1753) Species plantarum. Salvius, Stockholm, 1200 pp.McNeill, J., Barrie, F.R., Buck, W.R., Demoulin, V., Greuter, W., Hawksworth, D.L., Herendeen, P.S., Knapp, S., Marhold, K., Prado, J., Prud’Homme Van Reine, W.F., Smith, G.F., Wiersema, J.H. & Turland, N.J. (2012) International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants (Melbourne Code) adopted by the Eighteenth International Botanical Congress Melbourne, Australia, July 2011. [Regnum Vegetabile 154]. Gantner, Ruggell, 240 pp.Ortega, C.G. de (1797) Novarum aut rariorum plantarum horti reg. botan. Matrit. Ibarriana, Madrid, 51 pp.Rodríguez-Jiménez, L.S. & Espinosa-Garduño, J. (1996) Listado florístico del estado de Michoacán sección III (Angiospermae: Connaraceae-Myrtaceae except Fagaceae, Gramineae, Krameriaceae y Leguminosae). Flora del Bajío y de Regiones Adyacentes, Fascículo Complementario 10: 1–296.Tropicos (Org.) (2015) Tropicos database, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis. Available from: http://www.tropicos.org/Name/17606846 (accessed 25 June 2015)
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Rashley, Lisa Hammond. "Garden Club, Oakdale Elementary." English Journal 93, no. 4 (March 2004): 105. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4129001.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Garden Club of America"

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Rembold, Heather Lynn. "Cahuilla ways: An investigation of the Cahuilla Indians." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 1998. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/1446.

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Keith, Karin. "Why Teach: Presentation to Future Teachers of America Club." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2017. https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/1004.

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Huber, Erika. "Adult volunteer retention in an after-school garden club setting : a case study." Thesis, Kansas State University, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2097/9205.

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Master of Science
Department of Horticulture, Forestry, and Recreation Resources
Candice A. Shoemaker
Once a fixture of American schoolyards during the early 1900’s, school gardens in the United States are again growing in popularity. It is estimated that one-fourth of all public and private schools in the U.S. have a school garden. Funding, teacher involvement, support of the principal, volunteer help, garden coordination, maintenance assistance and site availability are all factors found to contribute to the success of school gardens and are also found to be the barriers to sustainability of school gardens. Many of these challenges can be overcome with the support of volunteers. Little is known however, about individuals who volunteer their time to a school garden program and more importantly no research has investigated the specific variables influencing volunteer retention in an after-school garden club program setting. A case-study of long-term adult after-school garden club program volunteers was conducted to determine the variables affecting one’s decision to continue volunteering after one semester with a program of this type. Twenty long-term after-school garden club program volunteers were interviewed. Interview responses were grouped into main theme and subtheme categories using NVivo, a qualitative analysis software. Main themes that had responses from at least 95% of the volunteers participating in the case-study, were isolated for further analysis. The top five subthemes for each of these isolated main themes were assessed and four of these main themes were found to have similar top five subthemes. These subthemes and the long-term volunteer demographics were then used to determine the variables affecting volunteer retention in an after-school garden club setting. Age, marital status and level of education were all found to affect length of volunteer service. Organizational commitment, positive volunteer relations, organizational support, learning opportunities and the opportunity to work with children all contributed to the decision of after-school garden club program volunteers to continue volunteering after one semester of service. Furthermore, it can be concluded that these volunteers continued to volunteer because their initial motivations, expectations and/or needs were met through their participation in the program.
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Safford, Sean C. "Why the garden club couldn't save Youngstown : social embeddedness and the transformation of the rust belt." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/17797.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 2004.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 197-211).
In 1975, Allentown, Pennsylvania and Youngstown, Ohio could be considered of a piece. Both were mid-sized cities in which nearly 35% of the local work force was employed in manufacturing. By 1983, both had taken on the moniker of the "rust belt"; dual processes of deindustrialization and hollowing out pointed toward bleak futures. Yet, twenty years later, it is clear that the cities' economies have actually proceeded down dramatically divergent paths. Allentown has found itself on the high-road of economic change (Harrison and Bluestone 1983; Piore and Sabel 1984; Kochan, Katz and McKersie 1986; Dertouzos, Lester and Solow 1989) while Youngstown has fallen into a lean and mean race to the bottom (Applebaum and Batt 1994; Harrison 1996). Challenging both learning region (Amin and Thrift 1994; Florida 1995) and communitarian social capital (Putnam 2000) perspectives on sub-national socio-economic change processes, this thesis argues that the cities' economic divergence can be traced to differences in the social structures in which firms are embedded (Romo and Schwartz 1995). Social embeddedness perspectives reject explanations based on either broad categorizations or pure efficiency in favor of ones that take into account the concrete structure of actors social networks (Granovetter 1985; DiMaggio and Powell 1990). These networks shape action both by determining access and control over information and resources as well as by defining the contexts in which actors' world views are rooted (Padgett and Ansell 1993; Podolny 1998). The research presented in this thesis is unique in that it combines sub-national historical comparison (c.f., Locke 1995; Saxenian 1996; Molotch, Greidenberg and Paulsen 2000) with longitudinal data on the structure of board
(cont.) interlocks (c.f., Galaskiewicz 1985; Romo and Schwartz 1995) to show how the specific structure of social networks within communities constrains and enables social action in the face of externally generated crises. Thus, it takes up the challenge to use network analysis to "pinpoint [the] causal mechanisms whose combinations produce the actual histories we observe" (Tilly 1992; Emirbayer and Goodwin 1994). Despite sharing remarkably similar economic histories, the social structures of Allentown and Youngstown developed along two very different trajectories. In Youngstown, a dense core of elites emerged in the 19th century which kept tight control over local industry which was centered on steel production. In Allentown, two groups of elites emerged early on that were associated with two separate industrial groups (also centered on steel). These groups competed with each other throughout the first century of the region's economic growth. The difference had important consequences early in the 20th century as industrialization gave way to Eastern European immigration and industrial union organizing activity in the 1930s. In Youngstown, social divisions within the community were essentially class-oriented leading to violent clashes as the core elite "circled the wagons" in the face of ethnic and later labor conflict. In Allentown, the most salient divides were based on communities within the region and their associated industrial blocks. Social conflict was less contentious as actors drew on cross-class social networks to find common ground. These differences were vitally important in the 1950s when the cities started ...
by Sean C. Safford.
Ph.D.
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Rahn, Mildred L. "Club 47, an historical ethnography of a folk-revival venue in North America, 1958-1968." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1993. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk3/ftp04/mq25882.pdf.

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López-Durán, Fabiola. "Eugenics in the garden: architecture, medicine, and landscape from France to Latin America in the early twentieth century." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/54553.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 2009.
"September 2009." Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 251-262).
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries--decades that saw the radical transformation of Latin American cities into metropolises-race and environment became social determinants of the modem utopian project of eugenics, the biological and social movement that claimed nothing less than the "improvement" of the human race. My study reveals how eugenics, fueled by an elite's fear of social degeneration in France during the Third Republic (1870-1940), moved from the realms of medicine and law to architecture and urban planning, becoming a political subtext in the building of modem Latin American nations that viewed France as a primary cultural and scientific paradigm. By bringing together science and aesthetics, this work offers an interdisciplinary study of a movement that, in its striving to create a new human ideal, found a moral guidepost in medical science, and a critical technology in architecture, urbanism, and landscape design. Analyzing eugenics as a set of practices characterized by motifs of generation/degeneration, species' survival and productivity, this dissertation is the first in-depth exploration of eugenics' influence on the construction of the built environment and its crafting of modernity.
by Fabiola López Durán.
Ph.D.
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Koenigsfeld, Jason Paul Hubbard Susan Sorrells. "Developing an industry specific managerial competency model for private club managers in the United States based on important and frequently used management competencies." Auburn, Ala., 2007. http://repo.lib.auburn.edu/2007%20Fall%20Dissertations/Koenigsfeld_Jason_42.pdf.

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Wartzman, Emma. "First We Cook." Scholarship @ Claremont, 2014. http://scholarship.claremont.edu/scripps_theses/363.

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This thesis is an exploration of cooking as a tool for personal health and community building, as well as for larger social change of the American food system. It looks at the decline of cooking in mid-20th century America, due to changes in technology, women's movement into the workforce, and the rise of fast and processed food. It then examines three distinct efforts going on today that are bringing cooking to the forefront of what they do--one in community gardening, one in food access programs, and one in food education. Each demonstrates the unique ability that cooking has to give immediate satisfaction. The lens is then widened to understand how this immediate satisfaction can, in turn, create waves in the way our food is currently produced on a much broader scale.
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Turner, Julie D. "To Make America Over: The Greenbelt Towns of the New Deal." Miami University / OhioLINK, 2010. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=miami1270068260.

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Katz, Deborah L. "Towards effective organizational participation in non-profit organizations : increasing the number of active members in the Austin Healey Club of America - Northeast region /." View abstract, 2002. http://wilson.ccsu.edu/theses/etd-2002-12/ThesisTitlePage.html.

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Thesis (M.S.)--Central Connecticut State University, 2002.
Thesis advisor: Glynis Fitzgerald. " ... in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Communication." Includes bibliographical references (leaves [43-48]). Also available via the World Wide Web.
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Books on the topic "Garden Club of America"

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D'Oench, Nancy. Gardens private & personal: A Garden Club of America book. New York: Abrams, 2008.

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D'Oench, Nancy. Gardens private & personal: A Garden Club of America book. New York: Abrams, 2008.

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Bonny, Martin, Hales Michael, and Garden Club of America, eds. Gardens private & personal: A Garden Club of America book. New York: Abrams, 2008.

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Graham, Landrum Robert, ed. The Garden Club Mystery. New York, USA: St. Martin's Press, 1998.

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Ferguson, Laura Burns. Founders Garden Club of Dallas: A history of achieving our objectives 1938-2013. Dallas, Tex: Business Express Press, 2013.

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Olcott, Diana Morgan. Winds of change 1963-1988: 75th anniversary chronicle. Princeton, N.J.?]: Garden Club of America, 1988.

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Club, Tallahassee Garden. Savory & sage: Recipes and gardening wisdom from the Tallahassee Garden Club. Tallahassee, Fla: Tallahassee Garden Club, 2006.

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Club, Tallahassee Garden. Savory & sage: Recipes and gardening wisdom from the Tallahassee Garden Club. Tallahassee, Fla: Tallahassee Garden Club, 2006.

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Bradley, Littleton P. History of the Ozark region of the Gardeners of America and the Men's Garden Clubs of America. Mesa, Ariz. (6109 East Anaheim St., Mesa 85205-8309): L.P. Bradley, 1998.

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Haegele, Katie. Garden club. Philadelphia, PA: Katie Haegele, 2011.

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Book chapters on the topic "Garden Club of America"

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Kent, Allan, David Powers, and Rachel Andrew. "Case Study: Roundtree Garden Club." In PHP Web Development with Macromedia Dreamweaver MX 2004, 341–459. Berkeley, CA: Apress, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4302-0701-6_9.

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Kusch, Frank. "Behind the Billy Club." In The Routledge History of Police Brutality in America, 211–23. New York: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003109969-22.

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Smith, Mark M., and Timothy Lockley. "Whitefield and Garden." In Slavery in North America: From the Colonial Period to Emancipation, 219–29. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003113867-7.

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Purkis, Charlotte. "The Other Gates: Anglo-American Influences on and from Dublin." In Cultural Convergence, 107–40. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-57562-5_5.

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Abstract An important influence on the foundation of the Dublin Gate Theatre in 1928 was the London Gate Theatre Studio. This chapter offers a historiographical survey concerning how the range of connections between these theatres have been treated by theatre commentators up to the present. Alongside this re-examination is a discussion of two other theatres that were also inspired by the London Gate, but established independently by the two London co-directors, Peter Godfrey and Velona Pilcher. Godfrey revived the early programming from London in 1943 at his ‘transplanted’ theatre in Hollywood, which also connected Los Angeles emigré culture back to Ireland. In London, Pilcher worked with a group of women associates to found a ‘new Gate’, the Watergate Theatre Club in 1949, which, with its avant-garde artistic ethos, had a cultural impact on the post-war London scene similar to the achievements of the earlier Gate theatres.
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Carroll, Dennis. "Potential Performance Texts for The Rock Garden and 4-H Club." In Rereading Shepard, 22–41. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-22509-5_3.

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"Garden Club of America." In The Grants Register 2023, 511–12. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-96053-8_240.

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"Garden Club of America." In The Grants Register 2020, 369. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-95943-3_390.

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"Garden Club of America." In The Grants Register 2021, 397. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-95988-4_403.

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"Garden Club of America." In The Grants Register 2022, 435. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-96042-2_1000.

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"Garden Club of America." In The Grants Register 2024, 559–60. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-96073-6_220.

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Conference papers on the topic "Garden Club of America"

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Lorne, Frank, Jamel Vanderburg, Aanchal Sharma, Jaan Malik, Rishabh Neb, Kitti Sandhu, Siva Sateesh Pitchuka, et al. "Establishing a Student-Community Book Club for Civic Engagement." In 13th International Conference on Applied Human Factors and Ergonomics (AHFE 2022). AHFE International, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.54941/ahfe1002266.

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This paper articulates the reasons and the implementation steps for the forming of a student-community book club that aims to build small communities motivated by Raghuram Rajan’s 2019 book: The Third Pillar: How Markets and the States Leave the Community Behind. We believe humans and societies survive based on rational dialogues. A book club of this type can provide escape valves for individuals holding strong unbendable beliefs on how society should function, which has dichotomized America since 2016. Themes generated from books (fictions or non-fictions) contain scientific or humanistic views can encourage community network building of the type that will broaden people's view, rather than focus on specific disagreements. Disintegration of various factors, according to Rajan, is the crisis that communities all over the world are facing. Building communities have always been some historical endeavors, resulting often from wars and land grabbings. The urgent needs to do so now are due to technological changes. Technologies are disrupting the lifestyles in the world that can amplify as well as compromise disagreements. A web-ground co-development is necessarily for bringing out the goods while managing the bad of technologies.
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Guo, Huiqin. "Differences of Marital View between China and America in The Joy Luck Club under Cultural Dimensions Theory." In 3rd International Conference on Contemporary Education, Social Sciences and Humanities (ICCESSH 2018). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/iccessh-18.2018.206.

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Минязева, Ю. М. "NOVOSELTSEVA NINA PROKOPYEVNA - MENTOR, SCIENTIST, FIRST CURATOR OF THE "FAR EAST, FOREIGN ASIA AND NORTH AMERICA" REGION OF THE VILAR BOTANICAL GARDEN." In Современные тенденции развития технологий здоровьсбережения. Москва: Федеральное государственное бюджетное научное учреждение "Всероссийский научно-исследовательский институт лекарственных и ароматических растений", 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.52101/9785870191027_2021_9.

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Dong, J., and J. Dave. "Design-Build-Test: The Capstone Design Project." In ASME 2007 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. ASMEDC, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2007-41452.

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Students working toward baccalaureate degree in Mechanical Engineering Technology (MET) at University of Cincinnati (UC) are required to complete a “Design, Build, and Test” senior capstone design project. Two of these capstone design projects during the 2005–2006 academic year were to design and build vehicles. One is a Basic Utility Vehicle (BUV), which was geared to meet the needs of developing countries for an affordable transportation. The national competition was held in Indianapolis, IN. The other one is an Autocross racing vehicle, which was built to meet the Sports Car Club of America (SCCA) Autocross specifications, and raced in the regional/local events. The Institute for Affordable Transportation (IAT) hosts a competition of designing and building BUV each year in Indianapolis, IN. IAT is a not-for-profit organization devoted to improving the living standards and enable economic growth in the developing world by creating a simple vehicle that can be assembled almost anywhere, by almost anyone. The competition tests and judges all of the entries to identify best design and suitable vehicles for developing countries. IAT has donated several vehicles to needy countries in South America and Africa. The SCCA is a 60,000-member not-for-profit organization featuring the most active membership participation in motorsports today. The foundation of the SCCA is its Club Racing program with over 2,000 amateur and professional motor sports events each year. One team of MET students built a BUV, and another team of students built an Autocross racing car as their senior projects. From concept to a final working vehicle with meeting the IAT’s or SCCA’s specifications, there are many challenges. The expertise and knowledge acquired from student’s coursework and co-op were utilized. This paper will give the short description of the senior capstone design course sequence at University of Cincinnati: the list of pre-requisites of its sequence, and partially describes 2005–2006 BUV and Autocross projects and the team experiences of the projects from start to finish.
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Урусов, В. М., and Л. И. Варченко. "INTRODUCTION IN THE FAR EAST: PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS." In Геосистемы Северо-Восточной Азии. Crossref, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.35735/tig.2021.45.97.024.

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Интродукция лесообразователей на Дальнем Востоке начинается с 1805 г. во владениях Российско-Американской компании, становится масштабной после 1890 г. в Хабаровске, Владивостоке, Уссурийске, Шмаковском монастыре, после 1930 г. – на юге Сахалина. Используются ели европейская, сибирская, колючая и лиственницы японская и Гмелина, сосны Банкса, веймутова, обыкновенная, сибирская, робиния, ясень пенсильванский. Массовое введение интродуцентов начинается после 1936 г. (создана Горнотаёжная станция) и после 1948 г. (организация академического Ботанического сада). Хорошие результаты таёжных пород Европы и Америки получены на Сахалине и отчасти в Приморье. Наиболее перспективен метод подбора интродуцентов по сходству климатов – климатических аналогов. The introduction of forest-forming species in the Far East begins in 1805 in the possession of the Russian-American company, becomes large-scale after 1890 in Khabarovsk, Vladivostok, Ussuriisk, Shmakovsky monastery, after 1930 - in the south of Sakhalin. Are used Picea abies, P. obovata, P. pungens; Larix leptolepis and L. dahurica; Pinus banksiana, P. strobus, P. sylvestris, P. sibirica; Robinia, Fraxinus pennsylvanica. The massive use of the introductions species begins after 1936 (the Gornotezhnaya Station was established) and after 1948 (the organization of the Academic Botanical Garden). Good results for the taiga breeds of Europe and America were obtained on Sakhalin and partly in Primorye. The most promising method for the selection of introduced species by the similarity of climates - of the climatic analogues.
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Read, Gray. "Memory Mapping, Story-telling, and Climate Justice." In 108th Annual Meeting Proceedings. ACSA Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.35483/acsa.am.108.114.

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“Quando dibujo, lo recuerdo todo“ (When I’m drawing, I remember everything). Ana, a sixteen-year-old agricultural worker from Guatemala who had emigrated to South Florida, drew a simple map of her neighborhood back home. A house, a garden with corn and fruit trees, a school, a market, and her grandmother’s house, were surrounded by mountains and forest. As she talked about her experience there and her more recent situation working in an orchid nursery, architecture students also made drawings to give visual form to the places of her story. Our project was an interdisciplinary class with English literature majors, to collect oral histories of immigration and climate justice. We worked with a local non- profit organization, WeCount! in Homestead, Florida to focus on the experience of agricultural workers from Mexico and Central America, who had left their drought-stricken countries, only to face other climate-change exacerbated risks in South Florida agriculture, such as heat stress. As architects, we approached story-telling visually, and developed memory mapping as a specific technique that opened a spatial point of view in counterpoint to linear narrative. The maps combine plan and view, and have no consistent scale, and shift scales as needed. As part of the oral history project, memory maps and images represented experience spreading out in space rather than moving forward in time as narrative. They show a field of relationships between people, places, activities, and situations, simultaneously live in memory, and suggest the dense multiplicity of physical experience well beyond the details necessary to drive the immigrant narrative. The images that the students drew, whether warm and wistful or harsh and horrifying, reveal a human connection in the places of memory.
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Reports on the topic "Garden Club of America"

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Butler, Bryan, Tom Barse, Nahla V. Bassil, and Kim Lewers. How we came to have the 'Monocacy' hop. Yakima, WA: Hop Growers of America, August 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.32747/2023.8127202.ars.

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The popularity of local craft beers in the US is growing, as is the desire for beers made with all-local ingredients. Maryland breweries have been able to use locally grown ingredients, including hops, but have not been able to claim use of a hop native to Maryland. 'Monocacy' hop was discovered in Maryland on a farm that was part of the original Carrollton Manor, once owned by Charles Carroll, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, in what was likely a cottage garden between the house and barn. Molecular fingerprinting established it as unique and clustering with hop accessions native to North America. Compared with cultivars currently grown in Maryland, 'Monocacy' is very large and vigorous, late maturing, and tolerant of of two-spotted spider mites, potato leafhoppers, and hop downy mildew. 'Monocacy' produces high yields of large open cones with an herbaal-floral aroma and abundant lupulin. Most hops have more alpha acids than beta acids, and contribute a bitter flavor to beers. The 'Monocacy' alpha acid content was lower than the beta acid content, with alpha to beta acid ratios ranging from 0.54 to 0.59 and could contribute to a beer that is not overly bitter. High myrcene (12.85%) and caryophyllene (38.13%) suggest a spicy-floral character. 'Monocacy' added an earthy and spicy note to lighter beers, and in some beers when used as a dry hop it added a light fruity note on the pallet in the finish. The most recent beer using 'Monocacy' had a medium-light body with a bisquity malt aroma and delicate "spicy/hoppy" nose. Maryland breweries are anxious to use this hop in their beers.
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