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    Keyser, V F, 406359

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete.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/397086Surname: KEYSER. Given Name(s) or Initials: V F. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 406359. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 38623.234312 Item: [2016.0049.29379] "Keyser, V F, 406359

    Paul F. Keyser, elected December 13, 1911, President 1927

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    Portrait of Paul F. Keyser, member of the Alta Club in Salt Lake City, Utah, elected December 13, 1911, President 1927, prominent in real estate and busines

    A New Collection of poetical pieces : original and translated Oder / Zusammengetragen und mit erläuternden Anmerkungen und einem Verzeichnis der schwersten Wörter versehen von F. G. Barth

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    Die Vorlage enthält insgesamt 7 WerkeAutopsie nach Exemplar der ULB Sachsen-AnhaltVorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Erfurt, im Verlag der Keyserischen Buchhandlung 1778

    Keyser Island, Connecticut

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    Correspondence:Letter (May 20, 1895) from John Harpes, S.J.; Copy of Letters (May 23, 1896) from F. Cardinal Satolli to A.M. McDonnell, S.J.; Circular to the Rectors (Oct. 13, 1898) concern the possible sale of Keyser Island; Letter (Jan. 16, 1899) from E.I. Purbrick, S.J., concerns sale of island; Six letters (1904) from T.J. Gannon, S.J., are addressed to Joseph Zwinge, S.J.**Former finding aid locations: 119_22_13; 69A*

    Synasterope pseudomystax Chavtur & Keyser, 2016, sp. nov.

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    Synasterope pseudomystax sp. nov. (Figs. 14–19) Etymology. The species name refers to the similarity to S. mystax Kornicker, 1975. Holotype. ZMH-K- 45824, adult female, length 3.12 mm, appendages are mounted on slide (45824 / 1) and destroyed valves are preserved in 70 % ethanol (45824 / 2). Type locality. R/V “Polarstern”, ANT XIX / 3, PS 61, 2002: ZMH-K- 45824 —adult female (length 3.12 mm), Stat. 43 - 8 -E, 60 ° 26.48´S – 56 °4.00´W to 60 ° 27.18´S – 56 ° 4.80´W, depth 3953.6-3962.4 m, 4 February 2002. Paratype. R/V “Polarstern”, ANT XXII / 3, PS 67, 2005: Stat. 154 - 9 -E: ZMH-K- 41911 —immature female (2.81 mm). Material (Fig. 20). R/V “Polarstern”, ANT XIX / 3, PS 61, 2002: Stat. 41 - 3: ZMH-K- 45817 possible—juvenile (1.9 mm); Stat. 42 - 2: ZMH-K- 41911 possible—juvenile (1.6 mm); Stat. 46 - 7: ZMH-K- 45818 immature female and juvenile; RV “Polarstern”, ANT XXII / 3, PS 67, 2005: Stat. 154 - 9: ZMH-K- 41911 – immature female (2.81 mm). Description of adult female. Carapace (Figs. 14 and 15). Elongate with evenly rounded posterior margin. Length 3.12 mm. Greatest height in middle (44 %). Infold behind rostrum with about 10 setae between list and outer margin; only 4 setae on rostral list; anterior infold with about 10 setae; posterior list with about 15 transparent setae and about 15 small setae between adjacent transparent setae. Infold between posterior list and posterior edge of carapace is poorly preserved. First antenna (Fig. 16 C–H). 1 st joint with lateral terminal sclerotized knob on both outer and inner sides (fig. 16 D, E); 2 nd joint with dorsal spinous seta; 3 rd joint with very short bare ventral seta and 6 long spinous dorsal setae; 4 th joint with 1 short bare and 1 long spinous seta, and 1 long spinous dorsal seta; sensory seta of 5 th joint with 6 filaments (Fig. 16 C, I); seta of 6 th joint somewhat longer than a-seta of 7 th joint. 7 th joint: c-seta with 3 long proximal and 1 short distal and 1 terminal filaments; b-, f-, and g-setae broken. Second antenna (Fig. 17 A–E). Protopodite with short slender medial seta. Endopodite 3 -jointed; 3 rd joint with long terminal seta. Exopodite joints without obvious spines. Mandible (Figs. 17 F–J, 18 A–D). Coxale endite broken and lost. Basale (Fig. 18 C, D): endite with 3 terminal spinous setae, 3 triaenid setae, 2 dwarf setae and glandular peg; U-shaped margin depression and short dwarf seta present on basale proximal endite; dorsal margin on right limb with 1 and on left limb without midseta. Exopodite (Fig. 17 F, H–J) reaching about one-half distance up dorsal margin of 1 st endopodite joint, with hirsute tip and 2 short subterminal setae. Endopodite: 1 st joint with 3 long spinous ventral setae; ventral margin of 2 nd joint with 3 long spinous terminal setae, dorsal margin (Fig. 18 A, B) with 1–3 proximal setae and stout spinous a-, b-, c- and dsetae; 1 short seta between a- and b-setae; 2 medial setae at margin between b- and c-setae; 5 medial setae forming oblique row between b- and c-setae; 1 long seta between c- and d-setae; 1 long seta near margin distal to d-seta; 3 rd joint with pointed dorsal claw and 5 setae (Fig. 17 G). Maxilla (Figs. 18 E, 19 A). Epipodial appendage relatively long. Proximal endite with 4 long spinous setae and distal endite with 3 long spinous setae. Dorsal margin of basale with 1 short proximal and 1–2 distal setae; ventral margin with 1 short proximal seta and 1 long terminal seta. Endopodite: 1 st joint with short dorsal seta and long ventral seta; 2 nd joint with long terminal seta. Fifth limb (Fig. 19 B–D). Epipodial appendage with 74 plumose setae. Comb: with long exopodial seta, 3 setae near ventral margin and 6 terminal setae. Sixth limb (Fig. 19 E–G). Antero-dorsal corner without seta on medial surface; anterior margin with 1 upper seta; anterior tip without setae, lateral flap with 4 seta; postero-ventral margin with about 20 setae. Seventh limb. Limb with 20–21 setae, proximal group with 9 + 7 (8) setae and distal group with 2 + 2 setae. Caudal furca. Each lamella with 9 claws and setae (1 st– 7 th claws and 8 th and 9 th setae). Medial and lateral eyes (Fig. 16 A). Medial eye bare, lateral eyes absent. Rod-shaped organ (Fig. 16 A, B). 1 -jointed with rounded tip. Description of immature female. Carapace (Fig. 15 B). Length 2.80–2.81 mm. Similar to that of adult female except a somewhat higher? position of incisur and pattern of central adductor muscle scars. First antenna, mandible (each limb with 1 midlength seta on dorsal margin on basale), maxilla etc. similar to that of female. Caudal furca. Each lamella with 8 claws. Comparison. This species is closely related to S. mystax Kornicker, 1975 but differs from it by size and structure of first and second antenna, mandible, maxilla, fifth and sixth limbs and rod-shaped organ (Table 7). Distribution. S. pseudomystax was collected from Antarctic waters between 59 °– 62 ° S and 56 °– 64 ° W at a depth of 2879–3962 m (Fig. 20). Composition. The genus Bathyleberis includes 8 species of which the following are known from the study area: B. monothrix Kornicker, 1975, B. oculata Kornicker, 1975, B. grossmani Kornicker, 1975, B. babax Kornicker, 1996 (in Kornicker & Poore 1996). Distribution. Members of this genus live between 71 ° N (Kornicker, 1988) and 61 ° S (Kornicker, 1975) and a depth range of 2–4303 m. 1. Sensory seta of 1 st antenna with 7 long terminal filaments, anterior margin of 6 th limb with 6 or 7 setae....... B. grossmani – Sensory seta of 1 st antenna with 1 short proximal and 6 long terminal filaments, anterior margin of 6 th limb with 1 or 2 setae.................................................................................................... 2 2. Lateral eye well developed with about 18 ommatidia; dorsal margin of mandibular basale with 3–4 midsetae...... B. oculata – Lateral eye absent or, if present, without ommatidia; dorsal margin of mandibular basale with 1 midseta................. 3 3. Rod-shaped organ 1 -jointed; anterior margin of 6 th limb with 2 setae....................................... B. babax – Rod-shaped organ 2 -jointed; anterior margin of 6 th limb with 1 setae.................................. B. monothrixPublished as part of Chavtur, Vladimir G. & Keyser, Dietmar, 2016, Description of new members of the family Cylindroleberididae (Ostracoda: Cylindroleberidoidea) from the Southern Ocean, pp. 301-329 in Zootaxa 4137 (3) on pages 320-328, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4137.3.1, http://zenodo.org/record/25805

    Variations on the Author

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    “Variations on the Author” discusses two of Eduardo Coutinho’s recent films (Um Dia na Vida, from 2010, and Últimas Conversas, posthumously released in 2015) and their contribution to the general question of documentary authorship. The director’s filmography is characterized by a consistent yet self-effacing form of authorial self-inscription: Coutinho often features as an interviewer that rather than express opinions propels discourses; an interviewer that is good at listening. This mode of self-inscription characterizes him as an author who is not expressive but who is nonetheless markedly present on the screen. In Um Dia na Vida, however, Coutinho is completely absent form the image, while Últimas Conversas, on the contrary, includes a confessional prologue that moves the director from the margins to the center of his films. This article examines the ways in which these works stand out in the filmography of a director who offers new insights into the notion of cinematic authorship

    FIGURE 37 in Benthic myodocopid Ostracoda (Philomedidae) from the Southern Ocean

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    FIGURE 37. Philomedes tetrathrix (Male: ZMH-K-42270). A—infold of anterior part of left valve of carapace; B—anterior part of right vale in lateral view; C, D—infold of caudal process of right and left valves; E—detail of infold on caudal process of left valve; F—upper lip and anterior process of body; G—detail of 1st and 2nd joints of 1st antenna.Published as part of Chavtur, Vladimir G. & Keyser, Dietmar, 2016, Benthic myodocopid Ostracoda (Philomedidae) from the Southern Ocean, pp. 1-70 in Zootaxa 4141 (1) on page 61, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4141.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/26044
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