120,512 research outputs found

    Calvert, C L, NX72474

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/375503Surname: CALVERT Given Name(s) or Initials: C L Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX72474 Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 36625188204 Item: [2016.0049.07811] "Calvert, C L, NX72474

    Calvert, Albert L, [No Service Number]

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/375502Surname: CALVERT Given Name(s) or Initials: ALBERT L Military Service Number or Last Known Location: No Service Number Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 47918188203 Item: [2016.0049.07810] "Calvert, Albert L, [No Service Number]

    Lynn Calvert

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    Lynn Calvert receives and award for 20 years of service in Academic Affairs. (l-r) President William Perry, Lynn Calvert, Provost Blair Lord.https://thekeep.eiu.edu/years_of_service_2013/1064/thumbnail.jp

    From Pedrolino to a Pierrot: The Origin, Ancestry and Ambivalence of the British Pierrot Troupe

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    In this article, the author considers the British development of the seaside Pierrot troupe, arguing that its construction is consistent with the notion of invented tradition, and the associated concerns with identity and nationality. Tracing the history of the character from its origins as Pedrolino in the commedia dell’arte, the article considers the traditional and novel elements of the British form. This also allows a brief account of the origin and aesthetics of the British tradition. Reflecting on the synthesis of the archaic and contemporary dimensions of the form, the author proposes that the new structure constructed an ambivalent class of character. The composition of both troupes and audiences was drawn from across the range of social strata. Through its collectivity and its treatment of contemporary social themes, it is argued the British Pierrot troupe approached and negotiated questions of a cultural and national identity in the late-Victorian period. Dave Calvert is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Huddersfield, UK. His research interests include street theatre, Applied Theatre and learning disabled performance. He is also a member of The Pierrotters, the last remaining seaside Pierrot troupe

    The status of Lestes apollinaris Navas and L. henshawi Calvert

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    Thomas W. Donnelly (1996): The status of Lestes apollinaris Navas and L. henshawi Calvert. Bulletin of American Odonatology 4 (3): 69-74, DOI: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.363581

    Lestes quadristriatus Calvert 1909

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    Lestes quadristriatus Calvert, 1909 Fig. 11 (♂ —App), Fig. 40 (K— ♂ pectoral color pattern). Etymology: quadristriatus = quadri, Latin for four + striatus, Latin for striped. Lestes quadristriatus Calvert, 1909: 104, Figs.: 13, 35–36 (description of male and female, illustration of male thorax in ventral view, appendages in lateral and mediodorsal views); Davies & Tobin 1984: 33 (data on publication and distribution); Lencioni 2005: 99, Fig. 58(A–C) (data on description, data on type locality, data on type deposition, data on distribution, data on larval description, illustration of appendages in lateral and dorsal views, thorax in ventral view from Calvert, 1909); Costa et al. 2006: 60–61, Fig. 35 (pterothorax color pattern in ventral view, key for adult males); Garrison et al. 2010: 117 (data on species). Types. Syntypes in CM (not examined). Larva described. No. Distribution. Brazil ( Mato Grosso). Diagnostic characters. ♂ —Cercus in lateral view: basal 2/3 straight with a basal semicircular expansion, apical 1/3 triangular. Cercus in mediodorsal view: base of cercus without spine, medial expansion forming two semicircular plates, the anterior larger and without spines, the posterior smaller and with spines. Paraproct: lost. ♀ —Basal plate not illustrated in Calvert (1909), pectoral color pattern as Fig. 40K.Published as part of Lencioni, F. A. A., Neiss, U. G., Dutra, S. L., Furieri, K. S., Juen, L., Batista, J. D. & Vilela, Diogo S., 2021, Synopsis of Lestes from Brazil with description of Lestes demarcoi sp. nov (Zygoptera: Lestidae), pp. 511-541 in Zootaxa 4990 (3) on page 522, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4990.3.4, http://zenodo.org/record/502700

    Lestes bipupillatus Calvert 1909

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    Lestes bipupillatus Calvert, 1909 Fig. 2 (♂ —App), Fig. 16 (♂ —habitus), Fig. 40 (B— ♀ pectoral color pattern). Etymology: bipupillatus = bi, Latin for two + pupillatus, Latin for pupil, in reference to the color of the venter of thorax, which has two black, round spots. Lestes bipupillatus Calvert, 1909: 95, Figs.: 15, 21–22 (description of male and female, illustration of male thorax in ventral view, appendages in lateral and mediodorsal views); Davies & Tobin 1984: 31 (data on publication and distribution); Bridges 1994: (VII) 33 (data on publication, type depository, type locality and references); Costa & Carneiro 1994: 303 (larva); Lencioni 2005: 90, Fig. 49(A–C) (data on description, type locality, type deposition, distribution, larval description, original illustration of appendages in lateral and mediodorsal view, thorax in ventral view from Calvert 1909); Costa et al. 2006: 60–61, Fig. 21, 22 (appendages lateral and dorsal view, key for adult males); Garrison et al. 2010: 117, Fig. 517 (data on species with reference to larval description, original illustration of appendages in lateral view); Lencioni 2017: 103–104, Fig. 38A–C, 39A (data on description, type locality, type deposition, distribution, and larval description, appendages in lateral and mediodorsal views, thorax in ventral view, male habitus). Types. Syntypes in CM and MCZ (not examined). Larva described. Yes (Costa & Carneiro 1994). Material examined. (2 ♂♂): Brazil: Santa Catarina, Nova Teutonia (now Seara), 27º11’00” S & 52º13’00” W, 300–500 m, v.1972, Fritz Plaumann leg. Distribution. Brazil (Mato Grosso, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Rio Grande do Sul, Santa Catarina), Venezuela and Argentina. Diagnostic characters. ♂ —Cercus in lateral view: proximal 3/5 straight with the distal 2/5 expanded and slightly bent ventrally, tip of cercus rounded. Cercus in mediodorsal view: base of cercus with a short distally–directed spine, medial expansion a little larger than the width of the base, semicircular, without spines and with sparse pale hair–like setae. Paraproct in lateral view: subequal to the cercus. Paraproct in dorsal view: long and narrow with a spoon–like tip. ♀ —Basal plate not illustrated in Calvert (1909), pectoral color pattern as in Fig. 40B.Published as part of Lencioni, F. A. A., Neiss, U. G., Dutra, S. L., Furieri, K. S., Juen, L., Batista, J. D. & Vilela, Diogo S., 2021, Synopsis of Lestes from Brazil with description of Lestes demarcoi sp. nov (Zygoptera: Lestidae), pp. 511-541 in Zootaxa 4990 (3) on page 514, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4990.3.4, http://zenodo.org/record/502700

    Obenchain, Lida Calvert, 1856-1935 (SC 3676)

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    Finding aid only for Manuscripts Small Collection 3676. Items related to the literary career of Bowling Green, Kentucky native Lida Calvert Obenchain (“Eliza Calvert Hall”): a letter from President Theodore Roosevelt regarding her book Aunt Jane of Kentucky; her correspondence with H. L. Mencken and Theodore Dreiser; notes about her family; photographs of her gravestone and Bowling Green house; and a clipping and program regarding the dedication of a historical marker in Bowling Green

    Geologic Characteristics of the Calvert Ash Bed, Ogallala Group (Miocene), Western Kansas

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    The Calvert ash bed, Ogallala Group (Miocene), was examined using three geologic subdisciplines, tephrochronology, geochemistry, and stratigraphy, to identify distinctive characteristics that would allow accurate correlation of the Calvert ash and establish the Calvert as a time-stratigraphic marker. To determine these characteristics, Calvert ash collected at its type section, the Calvert Ash Mine, was the primary focus of this report. The Calvert is a light gray (N7), coarse ash containing both pyrogenic and xenocrystic minerals. These minerals include quartz, alkali feldspar (sanidine), plagioclase feldspar (oligoclase), magnetite, biotite, hematite, hornblende, zircon, clinopyroxene, apatite, and calcite. The shards are predominantly thin, iridescent, and platy, range in size from 1.41 to 0.09 mm, have an average refractive index of 1.502, and lack vesicles and inclusions. The Calvert ash was fission-track dated at 11.5 ± 0.48 Ma. Three bulk samples from the Calvert Ash Mine were analyzed by atomic absorption for major oxides and trace elements. Based upon the chemical concentrations of SiO2, Na2O, and K2O in these samples, and the IUGS classification of volcanic rocks lacking modal analysis, the Calvert is classified as a rhyolite. Optical characteristics determined by this study that are useful in distinguishing the Calvert from other Ogallala ashes found in Kansas are shard habit, shard size, and rare occurrence of vesicles. The chemical data (major oxides and trace elements) determined for the Calvert in this study cannot be considered distinctive due to alteration by hydration and groundwater leaching. Any correlations between the Calvert and other ashes based solely upon optical properties or chemical concentrations determined by this study are not reliable. Further study on the chemical composition of the Calvert is needed for accurate correlation. This study has not established the Calvert as a time-stratigraphic marker

    Subsurface information catalog, 1963-1967

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    Mainly tables."This is the second in a series of supplements to the 'Subsurface information catalog,' [compiled by Warren L. Calvert], Information circular 31"--P. 1
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