Charles “Chuck” Lewis McCartney, Jr.
…in Hollywood, Fla. He retired in 2009 after nearly 19 years as a copy editor with The Miami Herald’s Broward Edition serving the Fort Lauderdale area. In the mid-1980s, he…
…in Hollywood, Fla. He retired in 2009 after nearly 19 years as a copy editor with The Miami Herald’s Broward Edition serving the Fort Lauderdale area. In the mid-1980s, he…
…we had never even set foot in Alexander County in the nearly 3 decades we’ve lived in North Carolina. Alexander County (in red) is in the upper Piedmont of North…
…geobotanical investigation of Chandler Mountain, St. Clair County, Alabama.” (1) Since I grew up in Alabama, and I was always interested in geology, too — in fact, I minored in…
…fungus proved in vain. However, in the summer of 1936 the same fungus was found growing on an insect in the same pool. This time the writer succeeded in growing…
…degrees.4 Schallert was an Externe at St. Mary’s of Nazareth Hospital in Chicago, Illinois from 1903 to 1904, and an intern at Playfair Maternity Hospital in Chicago, Illinois in 1904….
…Flora of the Carolinas by Radford, Ahles & Bell in 1968. In the spring of 1957, Ramseur collected with NCU Curator Harry E. Ahles for “Flora of the Carolinas” in…
…Thomas M. Pullen Herbarium: History. http://www.herbarium.olemiss.edu/history.html accessed on 20 November 2013. Find a Grave Memorial # 42089897 http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=42089897 accessed on 20 November 2013. Information for Alumni Directory, 1970. Huneycutt, Maeburn…
…Sagittaria calycina maxima Engelm. collected in Louisiana is the type specimen. Jared G. Smith re-named it Lophotocarpus calycinus in 1900 (6). Josiah Hale was also interested in cryptogams (7). He…
…for more than forty year. Photo courtesy of Find A Grave, Memorial ID 91332052. “Emma Lewis Lipps was born in Alexandria, Virginia on February 8, 1919 and died in Rome,…
…home using its Latin name, which means “little crown.” Others would call it “foamflower.” It’s easy to recognize and a beautiful plant growing in beautiful places. Perhaps fewer know that…