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    Beasley, H C J, NX32711

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/370853Surname: BEASLEY Given Name(s) or Initials: H C J Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX32711 Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 28005181208 Item: [2016.0049.03180] "Beasley, H C J, NX32711

    Haplomacrobiotus utahensis Pilato & Beasley, 2005, sp. n.

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    Haplomacrobiotus utahensis sp. n. Material examined: Utah, Canyonlands National Park in Moab, 20 specimens (holotype and 19 paratypes) in two samples (collection dates: June 2003, June 2004). Type repository: Holotype and three paratypes are deposited in the Maria Grazia Binda and Giovanni Pilato collection; 16 paratypes in the collection of Clark Beasley. . Description of the holotype: Body length 417 m, colourless, eye spots present, cuticle smooth without pores. Bucco­pharyngeal apparatus with rigid buccal tube and ventral lamina (Figs. 1 A; 2 A, B; 3). Mouth antero­ventral rounded by six well evident peribuccal lobes (Fig. 1 B). Peribuccal lamellae absent. Peribuccal papulae present, these structures different in size (Fig. 3 B) and probably, as reported by Pilato (1993) for H. hermosillensis, some of them are forked. A crown of fine teeth is present in the anterior portion of the buccal cavity (Fig. 2 B). Posterior portion of the buccal cavity without teeth but two laterodorsal and two ventro­lateral transversal ridges present. Medio­dorsal and a medio­ventral ridges seem to be absent. Buccal tube 43.1 m long and 6 m width (pt = 13.9). Stylet supports inserted on the buccal tube at 67.4 % of its length (pt = 67.4). Pharyngeal bulb with apophyses and three rod­shaped macroplacoids (Figs 1 A; 2 A, B; 3 A); microplacoid absent. First macroplacoid 5.0 µm long (pt = 11.6), second 4.6 µm (pt = 10.7), third 5.6 µm (pt = 13.0); entire row of macroplacoids 16.6 µm long (pt = 38.5). All legs with two single, thin and small claws (Figs 2 C, D). Internal claw on the second and third pairs of legs 5.2 µm long (pt = 12.1), external claw on the same pairs of legs 5.7 µm long (pt = 13.2); anterior claw on the hind legs 5.8 µm long (pt = 13.4), posterior claw of the same pair of legs 6.4 µm long (pt = 14.8). Lacking lunules and cuticular thickenings on the legs. Eggs unknown. Etymology: The name utahensis is derived from the state of Utah, where the specimens were collected. Differential Diagnosis: Haplomacrobiotus utahensis sp. n. is the second species of the genus; it is similar to H. hermosillensis in many characters, but differs from it in the some features: more evident peribuccal lobes (Figs. 1 B and 4 D); wider buccal tube (Table 1); thinner and shorter claws (Figs. 2 C, D and 4 A, B, C; Table 1); first macroplacoid different in shape (in H. hermosillensis the first macroplacoid with a longer, thin anterior portion (Fig. 4 B) and therefore in some focal positions that macroplacoid appears shorter than the second (Fig. 4 A), but in another focal position the true length of that placoid appears evident (Fig. 4 B). In H. utahensis sp. n. the anterior portion of the first placoid is shorter and therefore the true length of that macroplacoid is better evident (Figs. 1 A; 2 A). For this reason, when specimens of H. hermosillensis and H. utahensis sp. n. are compared not very carefully, placoids of the same length may seem to be, in some focus positions, different in length. Remarks: We emphasize that peribuccal lobes in H. hermosillensis were considered absent by Schuster et al. (1980; page 292, Table 1), but Fig. 4 D demonstrates that they are present. They are less visible when the buccal tube is retracted. The peribuccal papulae, as in H. hermosillensis (Pilato, 1993) may have different dimensions (Fig. 3 B) from one another; it is not clear whether they are forked or not. The characters of Haplomacrobiotus utahensis sp. n, particularly the presence, the number and the symmetry of peribuccal lobes and peribuccal papulae confirm the opinion (expressed by Pilato since 1969) that the genus Haplomacrobiotus must be ascribed to the family Calohypsibiidae.Published as part of Pilato, Giovanni & Beasley, Clark, 2005, Haplomacrobiotus utahensis new species of Calohypsibiidae (Eutardigrada) from North America, pp. 1-7 in Zootaxa 879 on pages 2-6, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.27321

    Velda and Velma Beasley

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    Color photograph of Velda (Beasley) Dalley and Velma (Beasley) Read, twin sisters born in Hooper, Weber County, Utah, in 1919. Velma was a fellow high school student with H. Bowman Hawkes. Photo taken at the Ogden LDS Temple

    Portrait of John H. Beasley

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    Mr. Beasley is wearing a dark business suit.This image is a preservation copy made from an unstable original nitrate negative

    Hagin - Beasley Letters 1854-1895

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    Family correspondence saved by Julia Ann Beasley. Includes letters from family members who fought in the Confederate army.https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/bchs-pubs/1015/thumbnail.jp

    Nancy Chapman and Mary Glynn Beasley

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    4-H members Nancy Chapman and Mary Glynn Beasley with homemade drinkshttps://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/ua-photo-collection/8252/thumbnail.jp

    Letter from A. H. Woodward to Walter L. Beasley, Birmingham, Alabama, May 29, 1924

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    This item is from the Woodard Family Papers, an extensive collection , including business and personal correspondence, financial records, photographs, and other materials of this Birmingham, Alabama family which operated the Woodward Iron Company

    Marriage record of Walker, W. E. and Beasley, Mary Jane

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    Marriage license for W.E. Walker and Mary Jane Beasley. H. Holman was the officiant

    H. S. P. (or Promising Mid-career Woman)

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    H. S. P. (or Promising Mid-Career Woman) is a coming-out exhibition by mid-career British artist Becky Beasley. H. S. P. expresses the joys and complexities of an entirely autistic life understood only in retrospect. Through the sensitivities of photographic, ceramic, and linen surfaces, the three centrepieces of H. S. P. are installations through which the paradoxes of the human need for intimacy manifest in alternatives that have become Beasley's trademark minimal approach to art making. How to live, how to speak, how to be together, how to be alone. H. S. P. – an acronym for Highly Sensitive Person1 - is a lyric to sensitive surfaces and to the highly individual process of being a person in the world. The insistence of individual presence is expressed in the reverse printed negative - often present in Beasley’s practice, - but here expressed repeatedly, insistently across the exhibition. BACK!, she insists. BACK! BACK! BACK! BACK! BACK! BACK! The reprise of Beasley’s last show at Galeria Plan B, ‘Depressive Alcoholic Mother’ (2018), in the form of the linoleum floor-work, Highly Sensitive Person, is an intentional déjà vu. The slight disorientation therein offers a tangible, uncanny experience of her own experience of late-diagnosis autism in the winter of 2020. Her personal research over the last two years led her deep into the fields of international medical negligence in female and hormonal healthcare and the ongoing misdiagnoses of atypical neurology

    In Loving Memory of Pearl Beasley Everhardt

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    Funeral program for Pearl Beasley Everhardt, died November 14, 1990. The funeral was held November 20, 1990 at Second Baptist Church, officiated by Rev. S. H. James. Funeral arrangements were made through the Lewis Funeral Home and she was buried in Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery near San Antonio, Texas
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