739 research outputs found

    Andrew Lytle correspondence with Lula Ulrica Whitaker, 1981 April 29

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    Letter from Andrew Lytle to Lula Ulrica Whitaker that provides additional biographical details about the author, supplementing his 1934 July 15 correspondence with Whitaker

    Andrew Lytle correspondence with Lula Ulrica Whitaker, 1981 April 29

    No full text
    Letter from Andrew Lytle to Lula Ulrica Whitaker that provides additional biographical details about the author, supplementing his 1934 July 15 correspondence with Whitaker

    U.S. President Donald Trump gives an exclusive interview to FOX News anchor Chris Wallace

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    U.S. President Donald Trump gives an exclusive interview to FOX News anchor Chris Wallace. Trump talks about what he calls "fake news," possible changes in his cabinet, his decision to name Matthew Whitaker acting Attorney General, the Robert Mueller investigation, the recent midterm elections, and his chances of being re-elected in 2020. Trump says that he saw no reason to listen to the recording of the brutal Khashoggi murder and that the media does not treat him fairly. He also calls retired Navy admiral William H. McRaven, who commanded the raid that killed Osama bin Laden, a "Hillary Clinton fan" and an "Obama backer" for challenging his assertion that bin Laden could have been killed or captured much earlier

    General Correspondence; Cannon, George Q.; 1896-1897

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    Letters, telegrams, and notes between John M. Whitaker and George Q. Cannon, 1892 to 1897Letter dated 6 July 1896 at New York City from W. K. Dickson of the American Mutoscope Company to "Geo. Q. Cannon & Sons" informing them that he is not the publisher of a book on Thomas Edison but the author; details on how they can get the book. Includes handwritten noted to John M. Whitaker on ordering the book; Telegram dated 6 December 1897 from George Q. Cannon to John M. Whitaker on the death of brother Sam Whitaker\u27s wife; Note dated 13 March 1896 from George Q. Cannon to John M. Whitaker; Note dated 2 January 1892 from George Q. Cannon to John M. Whitake

    A Bug in the Bugging Statute: United States v. Whitaker

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    In this paper the author will analyze the reasoning of the Whitaker holding and its ramifications with regard to the federal procedures for authorized electronic eavesdropping as prescribed in Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Acts of 1968. The author concludes that the procedural failing described by the Whitaker court can be corrected by mandatory judicial controls and more stringent post-seizure notification requirements

    A Bug in the Bugging Statute: United States v. Whitaker

    No full text
    In this paper the author will analyze the reasoning of the Whitaker holding and its ramifications with regard to the federal procedures for authorized electronic eavesdropping as prescribed in Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Acts of 1968. The author concludes that the procedural failing described by the Whitaker court can be corrected by mandatory judicial controls and more stringent post-seizure notification requirements

    William Whitaker interviewed by Ana Tostões

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    In February 2018, Ana Tostões interviewed William Whitaker, curator and collections manager of the Architectural Archives of the University of Pennsylvania School of Design, where the Louis I. Kahn Collection is hosted, in order to debate the importance of documentation for the preservation of Kahn’s legacy. William Whitaker was curatorial consultant of the exhibition Louis Kahn: The Power of Architecture (Vitra Design Museum, 2012) and is the co-author of The Houses of Louis I. Kahn (with George Marcus, 2013), the first comprehensive publication on the architect’s house designs. The management of the Louis I. Kahn Collection has been having a fundamental role, not only in the documentation and interpretation of Kahn’s life and work, but also in the success of the contemporary rehabilitation projects undertaken in his buildings

    Supplementary data - Biological, chemical and/or mechanical behaviour in liquid culture and MICP reinforced sands

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    These files provide the supplementary, underlying data sets to the information presented in the paper by Whitaker et al. (Biogeosciences, 15, 1–14, 2018, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-15-1-2018). For further information or questions related to these data sets please reach out to the corresponding author of the paper

    Euryparasitus maseri Whitaker & Klompen, n. sp.

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    Euryparasitus maseri Whitaker & Klompen n. sp. (Figs. 1 C–D, 2 C, 5) Diagnosis. Deutonymph of medium size. Some idiosomal and all hypostomal setae barbed. Setae S 3 absent from opisthosomal shield. Chelicerae with 4 teeth on the fixed, 3 teeth on the movable digit. Gnathotectum with a serrate anterior, free, margin. Acrotarsus on legs I absent. Description. Idiosomal length 797 (57), width 536 (51) (N= 6). Gnathosoma. Chelicerae with 4 large teeth on the fixed digit, and 3 on the movable digit (Fig. 1 D). Lyrifissures id and i present, well developed; dorsal seta vestigial or absent; pilus dentilis much larger than in E. occidentalis. Gnathotectum developed into a single median point; with serrate anterior margin (Fig. 1 C). All hypostomal setae barbed, tip of setae hyp 2 surpassing the insertion points of setae cs; setae hyp 2 subequal in length to setae hyp 1 (Fig. 2 D). Deutosternum with 14–16 rows of irregular shaped and arranged teeth. Palps as in E. occidentalis, but third tine of palpal pretarsus distinct. Idiosoma. Podonotal shield distinctly larger than opisthonotal shield (Fig. 5 A). Most setae inserted on dorsal shields smooth, but setae s 2, r 2, r 4, Z 5, and all marginal opisthosomal setae barbed. Setal complement on shields largely as in E. occidentalis, but opisthonotal seta S 3 absent. The occasional presence of an undesignated seta off the shield, near the usual position of seta S 3, suggests that S 3 might still be present, but inserted off the shield (see Fig. 5 A). Number of marginal setae in soft cuticle increased by presence of five additional setae, tentatively designated as setae R 3, R 4, R 5, Rv 2, and Rv 5. Shield setae j 2, r 4, Z 3 and Z 5 distinctly longer than remaining dorsal setae; setae Z 3 and Z 5 subequal in length, almost twice as long as the other opisthonotal setae; setae j 1 and z 1 similar in length to other podonotal shield setae; marginal opisthosomal setae generally shorter. Gland pattern and lyrifissure complement as in E. occidentalis. Venter (Fig. 5 B). Sternal shield large. Setae st 4 inserted off shield in soft cuticle in one specimen, on sternal shield in all other specimens examined. Peritremes extending anteriorly to the middle of coxal acetabula I. Peritrematal, metapodal, and anal shields as in E. occidentalis, although anal shield not quite as rounded. Sternal setae st 1 and st 2, and opisthogastral seta Rv 5 strongly barbed, remaining sternal and opisthogastral setae with weak barbs or smooth. Opisthogastral setal complement richer than in E. occidentalis by the addition of setae Zv 4 and Sv 2. Para­anal setae positioned slightly posterior to the anus. Lyrifissure and gland pattern generally as in E. occidentalis; cluster of gv 2 glands posterior to each coxa IV more prominent; lyrifissure ivp, situated posterior to the anus in E. occidentalis, not observed (may be an artifact). Legs. Leg setation pattern similar to that in E. occidentalis. Acrotarsus I absent or poorly developed. Legs II more conspicuously thickened than in E. occidentalis. Tarsal setae av 2, pv 2, and mv, and tibial setae pv 1 of legs II strongly thickened, spinelike, with distinct barbs. Tibial seta av 1 barbed, but less thick and spinelike. Lateral and dorsal setae may be barbed, but remain setiform. Material examined (all deutonymphs). U.S.A.: Oregon, Malheur Co., Whitehorse Ranch, 10 km SE of, 43 ° 15 'N 117 ° 40 'W, ex Onychomys leucogaster (CM 7223), 19 Aug 1976, coll. Maser, C. O., OSAL 013968 (Holotype). Paratypes: Same collection data, OSAL 013956– 67; Malheur Co., 10 km SSE Vale, 43 ° 15 'N, 117 ° 40 'W, ex Dipodomys ordii (Dipodidae) (CM 6478), coll. Maser, C. O., OSAL 013969; ex Spermophilus townsendii (Sciuridae) (CM 6471), 20 Mar 1975, coll. Maser, C. O., OSAL 013971; ex Spermophilus townsendii (CM 6496), 21 Mar 1975, coll. Maser, C. O., OSAL 013970; Malheur Co., 43 ° 15 'N, 117 ° 40 'W, ex Lemmiscus curtatus (Muridae) (CM 7233), 27 Aug 1976, coll. Maser, C. O., OSAL 013972; ex Lemmiscus curtatus (CM 7239), 29 Aug 1976, coll. Maser, C. O., OSAL 013973. CANADA: Alberta, Bow Island, 49 ° 52 'N, 111 ° 22 'W, ex Onychomys sp. (Muridae) (GSJ 1307), 11 Aug 1972, coll. Jones, G. S., OSAL 013974– 75. Deposition of types. Holotype deutonymph, OSAL 013968, in OSAL. Paratypes in OSAL, JOW, ZIN. Etymology. This species is named in honor of Chris Maser, who collected many of the mites in this study. Remarks. Relative to the ventral setal complement of adult E. emarginatus (Lee, 1970) this deutonymph features one additional Zv and one Sv seta. The additional Rv setae are considered less significant as some of these lateral setae may appear dorsal or ventral on slide mounted specimens. They may be homologous with any of the large number of marginal setae figured for E. emarginatus in dorsolateral position.Published as part of Hagele, Thomas, Kaufman, Bruce, Whitaker, John O., Jr & Klompen, Hans, 2005, The genus Euryparasitus in North America (Mesostigmata: Euryparasitidae), pp. 1-20 in Zootaxa 1036 on pages 12-14, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.16974
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