4,465 research outputs found

    Geary, Elmo -- Plate XXXX, Early Players of Emery

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    Geary, Elmo. Plate XXXX, Early Players of Emery. Dramatics in Castle Valley 1875 to 1925. Salt Lake City, Utah: University of Utah, 1953. Fig. 1 Isaac Allred; Fig.2 I.K. Williams and LeRoy Bunderson, Louis Jorgenson, George E. Anderson, and Arthur W. Anderson. Fig.3 Lucinda Bunderson Williams, Georgia Swenson Anderson, Lula Snow Anderson. Fig. 4 Clara Anderson. All from the town of Emery, Emery County (Utah)Drama; Histor

    Prospectus of Santa Clara College

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    Prospectus of Santa Clara College, written around June 1855; author could have been Fr. Nobili or Peter Burnett

    Prospectus of Santa Clara College

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    Prospectus of Santa Clara College, written around June 1855; author could have been Fr. Nobili or Peter Burnett

    Box 51, Neg. No. 40464: Clara Emery and Sela Porter

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    This black and white photograph features a portrait of Clara Emery, left, and Sela Porter - they are sitting next to each other with Sela sitting on the arm of a chair with her right arm around Clara\u27s shoulders; Clara is wearing a light colored blouse and a dark colored skirt, and Sela is wearing a dark colored blouse and skirt. Sela Porter and Clara Emery ordered the photograph.https://scholars.fhsu.edu/stafford_county/6926/thumbnail.jp

    Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 30 Number 2, Winter 1988

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    10 - UNDERSTANDING THE NEW SOVIETS A first-person account of the Soviet Union today by the author of two books on Russia. By Jim Garrison 16 - HOW TO GET INTO ADVERTISING An English graduate goes from waiting tables to a senior vice presidency on Madison Avenue. By Barbara Boyle 20 - 1988 ECONOMIC FORECAST For 15 years, Mario Belotti\u27s been making forecasts that are amazingly accurate. By Mario Belotti 22 - SANTA CLARA AND THE POPES Reviewing historic links with Rome shows how it affected SCU. By Gerald McKevitt, S.J. 26 - SCU\u27S ETERNAL FLAIM Biology professor Frank Flaim is in his 50th year at Santa Clara. By Patricia Fowlerhttps://scholarcommons.scu.edu/sc_mag/1078/thumbnail.jp

    Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 28 Number 3, Winter 1986

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    2 - IS SILICON VALLEY A HOUSE OF CARDS? By Michael S. Malone. A fresh, freewheeling forecast of the future of Silicon Valley. 7 - MOTIVATING CHILDREN TO SUCCEED By Ruth E. Cook. The author suggests some guidelines for helping children who don\u27t work up to their true potential. 11 - IN SEARCH OF HUMANITY By William J. Rewak, S.J. Santa Clara\u27s president explores the university\u27s role in the development of the human person. 16 - LEARNING TO LEAD A photo feature of executives at the beach, engaged in a new and appealing program from the Executive Development Center that teaches them to become leaders. Photos by Gene Miller. Text by Peg Major. 20 - THE REAL POVERTY TRAP By Frances Moore Lappe. The author of Diet for a Small Planet discusses sixth myths that exist about poverty. 26 - A POLITICIAN\u27S ODYSSEY By Diane Dreher and William Stovet: California Assemblyman and SCU alumnus John Vasconcellos is the subject of this article by two members of the Santa Clara faculty. 29 - FROM DONOHOE ALUMNI HOUSE By Jerry Ken; executive director of the Alumni Association. A new column of news and notes about alumni activities and plans. 30 - NEWS FROM CAMPUS Keeping you up-to-date between issues of Santa Clara Today.https://scholarcommons.scu.edu/sc_mag/1072/thumbnail.jp

    Prospectus of Santa Clara College

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    Prospectus of Santa Clara College, written around June 1855; author could have been Fr. Nobili or Peter Burnett

    Prospectus of Santa Clara College

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    Prospectus of Santa Clara College, written around June 1855; author could have been Fr. Nobili or Peter Burnett

    Santa Clara Magazine, Volume 44 Number 3, Winter 2002

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    10 - GLOBALIZATION EMPOWERS GOOD AND EVIL By Rob Elder. Thomas Friedman, Pulitzer Prizewinning author and international affairs columnist for The New York Times, discusses this complex issue during a visit to campus. 14 - ON THE COLLISION OF WORLDS By Fred White. Corny science fiction movies inspire an SCU English professor to ponder deeply cosmic questions. 18 - THE CAMPAIGN FOR SANTA CLARA By Elizabeth Kelley Gillogly \u2793. SCU launches the largest campaign in its history, with plans for endowed scholarships, a new library, a new building for the Leavey School of Business, and much more.https://scholarcommons.scu.edu/sc_mag/1104/thumbnail.jp

    Formica clara subsp. sinae Emery 1925

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    Formica clara sinae Emery, 1925 stat. n. Formica rufibarbis var. sinae Emery, 1925; China: Shantung, Tsingtao. [replacement name for Formica rufibarbis var. orientalis Wheeler, 1923, a junior primary homonym of Formica fusca ssp. orientalis Ruzsky, 1915] Type material examined: Three workers labelled "ShanTung', China Aug. 24 1922 A. P. - Jacot " [integrated interpretation from both handwritten labels of Jacot], " A. P. Jacot No. 2287", " Gift of W. M. Wheeler ", " M. C. Z. Type 1-3 21733", " var. orientalis Wheeler "; three further workers labelled "ShanTung', China Aug. 24 1922 A. P. - Jacot " [integrated interpretation from both badly handwritten labels of Jacot], " Gift of W. M. Wheeler ", " M. C. Z. Type 4-6 21733"; all MCZ Cambridge. Material examined: 1 sample with 6 workers from China was subject to a numeric analysis of 18 characters (Fig. 23). 1 sample with 6 workers from China was subject to a numeric analysis of 18 characters. China: Shantung (type orientalis), 24.VIII.1922 [36.24° N, 120.32° E, coordinates estimated]. Description of worker (based on the type sample): medium-sized Serviformica, CS 1.327 mm; pronotum more hairy than in F. clara s. str., nPN1.4 9.2. Propodeum plus dorsolateral metapleuron normally with one seta. Petiole narrower than in average F. clara s. str.: PEW / CS1.4 0.428. All other body dimensions near the average of the nominal form: CL / CW1.4 1.142, OceD / CS1.4 0.168, EYE / CS1.4 0.283, SL / CS1.4 1.060, nMN1.4 1.6, nPE1.4 2.5, nHFFL1.4 0.2, RipD1.4 4.2, sqPDG1.4 2.9. Clypeus with sharp median keel and longitudinal microcarinulae. Frontal triangle finely transversally rippled and with 40 - 60 pubescence hairs. Eyes with microsetae of 5 - 7 µ m maximum length. Ventral coxae and gaster tergites with long setae. Dorsal crest of petiole in frontal view convex, sometimes with straight median portion. In lateral aspect wedge-shaped, relatively small with more convex anterior and more straight posterior profile. Colouration as in the typical northern population of F. clara s. str.: light yellowish brown with darker vertex, dorsal pronotum and mesonotum, coxae only slightly more dark. Comments on taxonomy: Though being most similar to F. clara s. str. in the majority of characters, the much more developed pronotal pilosity (nPN1.4 9.2) and some 2850 km distance from the next known population of F. clara s. str. makes it advisable to establish an East Chinese subspecies F. clara sinae. We cannot exclude that F. c. sinae could have species rank but testing this is prevented by lack of further sympatric material. Distribution and biology: This subspecies is only known by the type series which was collected on the sand-flats west of Nu Ku Kow, Kiachou Bay, Quingdao (= Tsingtao), Shandong Province (Wheeler 1923).Published as part of Seifert, B. & Schultz, R., 2009, A taxonomic revision of the Formica rufibarbis Fabricius, 1793 group (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)., pp. 255-272 in Myrmecologische Nachrichten 12 on pages 265-26
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