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Kathleen Anne Buhle (born c. 1969) is an American writer and non-profit executive.She is the founder and CEO of the non-profit organization The House at 1229. Buhle is the author of the 2022 memoir If We Break: A Memoir of Marriage, Addiction, and Healing, which details her life while married to Hunter Biden, a son of U.S. President Joe Biden.
1965: FFA was desegregated; FFA absorbed the New Farmers of America organization for students of color. 1969: FFA membership becomes available to female students. 1988: Official Name change from Future Farmers of America to National FFA Organization. 2006: National FFA Foundation receives first $1 million contribution from Ford Motor Company.
Buhle may refer to: Johann Gottlieb Buhle (1763–1821), German philosopher; Kathleen Buhle, American author and non-profit executive; Mari Jo Buhle (born 1943 ...
May 2—MOSES LAKE — When it comes to the cost of farming, irrigation — especially in the Columbia Basin — is a cost that has to be factored in and planned for with each acre having a place ...
Farmers Institute is a historic school building on a small campus in Shadeland, Tippecanoe County, Indiana. It was built in 1851, and expanded to its present two stories in 1864–1865. It was built in 1851, and expanded to its present two stories in 1864–1865.
The movement—and especially the Grange, for on most important points the latter movements only followed where it had led—contributed the initial impulse and prepared the way for the establishment of traveling and local rural libraries, reading courses, lyceums, farmers institutes (a steadily increasing influence) and rural free mail ...
The Senate and House versions of the black farmers bill, reopening black farmers discrimination cases, became law in 2008. [8] The new law could affect up to 74,000 black farmers according to some news reports. [23] In 2008 hundreds of black farmers, denied a chance to have their cases heard in the Pigford settlement, filed a new lawsuit ...
By the end of the 1980s, a new approach to farmer training emerged in Indonesia called the 'Farmer Field School' (FFS). The broad problem which these field schools were designed to address was a lack of knowledge among Asian farmers relating to agroecology, particularly the relationship between insect pests and beneficial insects. [2]