34,472 research outputs found

    Bauer (Wolf G.) interview

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    Mr. Bauer was a pioneer climber on Mt. Rainier and Mt. Goode. He was the founder of the Mountaineers climbing course and helped establish the Mountain Rescue Council. Subject timestamps: (00:00) Early climbing and skiing interests (2:00) 1927 Bauer joins Mountaineers, was a ski instructor at 15, (3:10) Bauer wins the first slalom race at Snoqualmie Lodge, involvement in skiing with mountaineering, (6:00) 1932 involved with Cub Scouts in Troop 145 (Wallingford District); started the Scout Explorer program which involved climbing training, (9:00) 1934 approached Mountaineer board about teaching a climbing course, began teaching course via European books Bauer read, (14:15) second year of course administration [1935], beginning and advanced technical climbing courses taught by Bauer, (16:20) technical skills allow Bauer to climb more difficult peaks, older Mountaineer "cliques" take notice of new techniques, (19:00) correspondence with Sierra Club re: Northwest ice and snow climbing in exchange for Sierra information on rock climbing, (20:20) imported pitons and other equipment before they were carried in stores, (21:40) skiing history in Seattle [stop in tape], (23:15) July 1936 first ascent of Mt. Goode was a class project in Bauer climbing course, (28:15) equipment and techniques used when Bauer climbed vs. "current" climbing techniques,(30:30) continuation of Mt. Goode climb detail; Jack Hossack, George MacGowan included in climb, (34:55) first several attempts on Ptarmigan Ridge (NW side) on Mt. Rainier, (43:15) safety considerations during Ptarmigan Ridge climb, (46:00) Mountain Rescue and Safety Council origins in 1948, Otto Trott, Ome Daiber join, (53:55) 1948 first Mountain Rescue and Safety Council conference, (56:45) safety equipment and technique. Interview ends abruptly, several stops and starts in tape with loud thumps. This accession is part of the North Cascades History Project.To request a high resolution or uncompressed reproduction, or to obtain permission to use any portion of this item, contact the University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections. Email: [email protected]. Please reference the Digital ID Number.1 sound cassette, analog, stere

    Otto Bauer (1881-1938) : thinker and politician /

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    This work depicts Otto Bauer as the main politician of the SDAP and attempts a critical-analytical interpretation of his socio-political theories, which are shown against the background of the debates within the First and Second Internationals, political events within the SDAP, the international workers' movement, and the socio-historical processes in Austria and Europe at the time.--"First published in German by Peter Lang as Otto Bauer: Studien zur social-politischen Philosophie, Frankfurt, 2005."Includes bibliographical references and index.Print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed.This work depicts Otto Bauer as the main politician of the SDAP and attempts a critical-analytical interpretation of his socio-political theories, which are shown against the background of the debates within the First and Second Internationals, political events within the SDAP, the international workers' movement, and the socio-historical processes in Austria and Europe at the time.--JSTO

    Bauer, A G, QX5754

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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/370686Surname: BAUER Given Name(s) or Initials: A G Military Service Number or Last Known Location: QX5754 Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 44584181041 Item: [2016.0049.03013] "Bauer, A G, QX5754

    Replication data for: "The Rising Cost of Climate Change: Evidence from the Bond Market"

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    Bauer, M. D., and Rudebusch, G. D. (2023). “The Rising Cost of Climate Change: Evidence from the Bond Market.” Review of Economics and Statistics, 105:5, 1255–1270

    Bauer, G

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    Bauer (G.) Roux (J.M.) - La rurbanisation.

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    Guigou Jean-Louis. Bauer (G.) Roux (J.M.) - La rurbanisation.. In: Revue économique, volume 28, n°2, 1977. p. 310

    Bauer (G.) Roux (J.M.) - La rurbanisation.

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    Guigou Jean-Louis. Bauer (G.) Roux (J.M.) - La rurbanisation.. In: Revue économique, volume 28, n°2, 1977. p. 310

    Writers Talk Featuring Kevin Bauer & Scott Raab

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    Kevin Bauer, President of the OSU student group 8th Floor Improv, discusses writing on the fly and what audience members can expect during the November 18th show. Also, Scott Raab, author of The Whore of Akron, discusses writing about LeBron James, and what he'll talk about during his Writers Talk book tour stop on November 18 at the Ohio State University Bookstore.The media can be accessed here: http://streaming.osu.edu/knowledgebank/cstw12/WT_WCRS_11-14-11_ScottRaab_KevinBauer.mp3Ohio State University. Center for the Study and Teaching of Writin

    Honor Guard in front of President Warren G. Harding's tomb

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    This photograph shows the Honor Guard in fron tof President Warren G. Harding's tomb in Marion, Ohio. Caption reads "Honor Guard Det. 10th Inf. 1st Lieut Walter Lee Sherfey Comdg. Jan. 22,-1925. Photo by Bauer" Warren G. Harding, the 29th President of the United States (1921-1923), was born in Blooming Grove, Ohio, in 1865. At age 14, Harding attended Ohio Central College in Iberia, Ohio, where he edited the campus newspaper and became an accomplished public speaker. He married Florence Kling de Wolfe in 1891, and embarked on his political career in 1900 by winning a seat in the Ohio legislature. After serving two terms as an Ohio Senator, Harding served as Lieutenant Governor in 1904 for two years before returning to the newspaper business. Although he lost the 1910 gubernatorial race, Harding was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1914. Political insider Harry Daugherty promoted Harding for the Republican presidential nomination in 1920. His front porch campaign was centered on speeches given from his home in Marion, Ohio, pledging to return the country to “normalcy” in this post World War I era. Harding easily won the election, gaining 61 percent of the popular vote. On August 2, 1923, Harding unexpectedly died from a massive heart attack while touring the western United States, and is entombed in the Marion Cemetery

    Goggia incognita Bauer 2017, sp. nov.

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    Goggia incognita sp. nov. (Figs. 1 C, 1D, 4, 5A) Diplodactylus lineatus (part) Gray, 1845 Phyllodactylus lineatus (part) Smith, 1849 Phyllodactylus lineatus lineatus (part) Hewitt, 1937 Goggia lineata (part) Bauer, Good, and Branch, 1997 Holotype. CAS 224024: adult male. South Africa, Western Cape, Jacobsbaai (32° 59' 19" S, 17° 52' 37" E). Collected by A. M. Bauer, R. A. Sadlier, A. Whiting, 9 September 2001. Paratypes. CAS 224022 (adult female), CAS 224023 (adult female): same data as holotype. CAS 176047 (adult female): Same locality as holotype. Collected by A. M. Bauer, 23 May 1990. CAS 206692 (adult male), CAS 206697 (adult female): Same locality as holotype. Collected by A. M. Bauer, A. C. Lamb, J. L. Wright, P. Moler, R. D. Babb, 11 July 1998. MCZ R-192442 (adult female): South Africa, Western Cape, Mauritzbaai (32° 58' 39.8" S, 17° 52' 51.9" E). Collected by M. P. Heinicke, A. M. Bauer, T. Gamble, D. Zarkower, J. Marais, A. Kuhn, E. Frietas, R. Skinner, 2 August 2013. MCZ R 192395 (adult females), MCZ R-194417 (adult male): South Africa, Western Cape, 1 km S Jacobsbaai (32° 59´19.1´´ S 17° 52´36´´ E). Collected by M. P. Heinicke, A. M. Bauer, T. Gamble, D. Zarkower, J. Marais, A. Kuhn, E. Frietas, R. Skinner, 24 July 2013. MCZ R-192446 (subadult male), MCZ R-194450 (adult male): South Africa, Western Cape, 4.3 km S Jacobsbaai (33° 0´20.9´´ S, 17° 52´46.5´´ E). Collected by M. P. Heinicke, A. M. Bauer, T. Gamble, D. Zarkower, J. Marais, A. Kuhn, E. Frietas, R. Skinner, 2 August 2013. Referred Specimens. See Branch et al. (1995): all specimens listed as Goggia lineata from south of 31° S. Etymology. The specific epithet is from the Latin word incognitus, meaning “not known”. The English phrase “going incognito” refers to remaining hidden or disguised. The name is chosen to reflect the 150+ year time period in which this species has remained hidden within what were considered nominotypical populations of Goggia lineata. It additionally reflects the natural history of the species, as members of the species are typically inconspicuous and hidden under cover objects by day. The name is used as an adjective. Diagnosis. A small-bodied Goggia, snout-vent length to 28.58 mm. Body form is cylindrical, with a deep head and short, rounded snout. The rostral scale bears a median cleft, and snout scales are relatively large and domed, with 8–10 rows of scales between the rostral and the anterior margin of the orbits. Dorsal scalation is homogenous, consisting of uniform flattened subimbricate scales, grading to clearly imbricate on the venter. Midbody scale rows number 73–81. Digits bear a single pair of subdigital scansors (“leaf toes”) enclosing a small claw. Males typically have five precloacal pores. Typical color pattern consists of a gray background overlain with a series of small, often unnoticeable pale spots with dark anterior margins that typically fuse to form a series of scallops or chevrons. Some individuals additionally bear four dark longitudinal stripes, which in this species are always connected by the aforementioned scallops. The combination of leaf toes, atuberculate dorsal scalation, and cleft rostral distinguishes this species from all non- Goggia geckos in southern Africa. Goggia incognita sp. nov. can be distinguished from G. microlepidota based on its much smaller body size (maximum SVL 29 mm in G. incognita sp. nov. vs. 67 mm in G. microlepidota). All small-bodied Goggia except for G. lineata can be easily distinguished from G. incognita sp. nov. based on color pattern: in G. braacki, G. essexi, G. hewitti, and G. hexapora, the pale spots and dark pattern elements form a clear reticulated pattern. In G. gemmula and G. rupicola (including “ rupicola ” from Kliprand described as another new species below), the pale spots are large and are yellow or orange rather than white or cream. In addition to color pattern, G. braacki and G. hewitti differ from G. incognita sp. nov. in being largerbodied (SVL to 35 mm in G. braacki, 37 mm in G. hewitti), having only four precloacal pores in males, and in having more midbody scale rows (usually more than 80). Goggia essexi, G. gemmula, G. rupicola, and G. “ rupicola ” also have only four precloacal pores in males; G. essexi, G. rupicola, and G. “ rupicola ” also have flattened bodies and typically more than 80 midbody scale rows, whereas G. gemmula has a more elongate body than G. incognita sp. nov. Goggia hexapora usually has six precloacal pores in males and more than 80 midbody scale rows. Goggia lineata is the species most similar to G. incognita sp. nov., but can be distinguished as having a color pattern typically dominated by bold longitudinal stripes (Fig. 1), and having smaller, flatter scales on the head, with 11 or more rows between the rostral and the anterior margin of the orbits, vs. 8–10 in G. incognita sp. nov. (Fig. 5). Description of the holotype. Adult male. SVL 26.62 mm. Body cylindrical, trunk not elongate (AGL/SVL ratio = 0.45). Head deep, not dorsoventrally flattened (HW/HD ratio = 1.75); snout rounded, about twice the diameter of the orbit. Lores inflated, interorbital region slightly concave. Ear opening is small, obliquely rounded, and without a tympanic shield. The rostral is subpentagonal with a median cleft, and the rostral along with the first supralabial and three nasals enter the nostril. The largest nasal borders the rostral. The nasorostrals are separated by a single granule. Supralabials number 7/6 (R/L), infralabials 6/6 (R/L); the mental is subpentagular with a shallow apex and is bordered by two enlarged chin shields, which are in turn bordered by six smaller granules. The snout is short, and snout granules are noticeably enlarged, rounded, and more domed than scales elsewhere on the head; there are eight rows of scales from the rostral to the level of the anterior edge of the orbit, and eight granules from the nostril to the anterior edge of the orbit. Scales on the crown are smaller and flatter, with 15 granules separating the anterior margins of the orbits. Dorsum covered by uniform, smooth, flat subimbricate scales, with subimbrication resulting in rhomboid appearance to the scalation; the grade to larger, smooth, imbricate scales on the belly which are hexagonal in shape and may have denticulate edges. At midbody are 78 scale rows. Five precloacal pores are present anterior to the cloaca, and three enlarged tuberculate scales (cloacal spurs) are present on either side at the tail base along the hemipenial bulges. The limbs are relatively short (FL/SVL ratio = 0.15), covered in uniform, subimbricate or imbricate granules, with the median series slightly broader than lateral scale series. The toe tips are rounded with small expansions bearing a pair of large, rectangular scansors (toe pads) between which is a small claw. The tail is cylindrical, tapering, regenerated. Original portion of the tail measures 3.88 mm; the regenerated portion is an additional 14.99 mm. The unregenerated portion of the tail is covered above with regular rows of uniform, smooth granules, whereas the ventral surface has larger, flatter imbricate scales. The regenerated portion of the tail is entirely covered in large imbricate scales. Coloration. In preservative, the dorsum is gray-brown in color. Barely perceptible dark temporal lines extend from the eyes above the ears to the nape. On the dorsum, a series of faded dark scallops extend transversely across the dorsum, the dark scallop on the unbroken portion of the tail being least faded. Neither pale spots nor longitudinal stripes are visible. The regenerated tail is more brown and less gray than the remainder of the body. Ventrally, the body is immaculate and cream-colored. In life, the ground color is gray without brown infusion. The pattern is as in preservative, with dark temporal lines above the ears and a series of transverse scallops of the dorsum, but is much more obvious and not faded. The venter remains cream-colored, and the regenerated tail is more brownish than the remainder of the body. Variation. Scale counts in the paratype series show minor variation compared to the holotype (Table 4). Chin shields sometimes three instead of two in MCZ R-192442 and CAS 224023. The number of granules bordering the chin shields varies from 5–7 (mean = 6.27). In specimens MCZ R-192395, MCZ-R192442, and MCZ R-194450, two granules separate the nasorostrals instead of one. The size of the granules on the head varies slightly, with 7–9 granules between the nostrils and the anterior orbit margin (mean = 8.27), 12–16 granules across the crown at the anterior margin of the orbit (mean = 14.6), and 8–10 granules from the rostral to the anterior margin of the orbit (mean = 9). Midbody scale rows vary from 73–81 (mean = 76.5). Coloration in the paratypes is similar to the holotype, but in some individuals more noticeable longitudinal stripes are present, or the dark scallops are arranged such that both transverse and longitudinal patterns are formed. Distribution and Natural History. Goggia incognita sp. nov. is endemic to South Africa, being known from much of the western part of Western Cape Province, with additional records from further east in the Little Karoo and Karoo, also in Western Cape Province. The distribution of this species comprises what was formerly considered the southern half of the distribution of G. lineata. The boundary between the two species appears to be at the Knersvlakte, a quartz plain lying between the Cape Fynbos and Little Namaqualand ecoregions, near the border between the Western Cape and Northern Cape provinces, with G. incognita sp. nov. occurring only to the south in the Cape (Fig. 2). Many references to the ecology and natural history of Goggia lineata in both the technical and popular literature actually refer to G. incognita sp. nov., and the two species are ecologically similar. Goggia incognita sp. nov. is a terrestrial, nocturnal species that shelters by day under a wide range of available debris, including under stones, in plant litter, and under or within dead Aloe stems (Branch & Bauer 1995, Branch & Braack 1989, Branch 1998). At the type locality, along the coast, individuals may be encountered both under boulders and under strand debris. At Farm Buffelskloof, in the Little Karoo, no individuals were found sheltering under the local conglomerate rock, but one individual was found inside a dead Aloe. Regenerated tails are very common in this species, and individuals also often autotomize their tails when handled even if the tail is not grasped, suggesting that tail autotomy is a frequently employed defense mechanism. Gecko species found syntopically with G. incognita sp. nov. (and potentially under identical cover objects) include Afrogecko porphyreus and Pachydactylus geitje near Jacobsbaai and Goggia hewitti and Pachydactylus geitje at Farm Buffleskloof.Published as part of Bauer, Aaron M., 2017, Molecular phylogeny reveals strong biogeographic signal and two new species in a Cape Biodiversity Hotspot endemic mini-radiation, the pygmy geckos (Gekkonidae: Goggia), pp. 449-470 in Zootaxa 4312 (3) on pages 458-461, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4312.3.3, http://zenodo.org/record/85572
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