6,304 research outputs found

    The Haunting of L.S. Lowry: Class, Mass Spectatorship and the Image at The Lowry, Salford, UK

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    In a series of momentary encounters with the surface details of The Lowry Centre, a cultural venue located in Salford, Greater Manchester, UK, this article considers the fate of the image evoked by the centre’s production and staging of cultural experience. Benjamin’s notion of ‘aura’ as inimical to transformations of art and cultural spectatorship is explored, alongside its fatal incarnation in Baudrillard’s concept of ‘simulation’. L.S. Lowry, I argue, occupies the space as a medium: both as a central figure of transmission of the centre’s narrative of inclusivity through cultural regeneration, and as one who communes with phantoms: remainders of the working-class life and culture that once occupied this locale. Through an exploration of various installations there in his name, Lowry is configured as a ‘destructive character’, who, by making possible an alternative route through its spaces, refuses to allow The Lowry Centre to insulate itself from its locale and the debt it owes to its past

    Lois Lowry talks about her writing

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    Acclaimed children's author Lois Lowry talks about her writing, plot and character development, and the plot-line of her most recent book "Gossamer." She also discusses the possibilities of a movie based upon her book "The Giver" which would star Jeff Bridges. Lowry is interviewed by Capital Area District Library South Services Coordinator Nicole Wells for the "Author Corner Live" series from CADL

    An exploration of the outsider's role in selected works by Joseph Conrad, Malcolm Lowry, V.S. Naipaul.

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    PhDThis thesis explores ways in which the outsider questions rather than confirms dominant cultural values whilst avoiding the crudity of overt politicisation. I argue that the outsider's preference for an observer's stance is not so much an act which denies responsibility to the world of his day, but rather a means of reassessing its priorities. In Section One, I discuss Conrad's role as an outsider in the age of Empires. I demonstrate the ways in which Conrad employs narrators, frequently using strategies of irony which can be and have been read in very different ways. I argue that Conrad uses irony as a tool for condemnation rather than condonement of imperialist practice, if not its ideology. In Section Two, I discuss Lowry as an emigre from England (so contrasting him with Conrad, the immigrant from Europe), and examine his dissenting voice which opposes bourgeois prejudice against the working class, a totalising ideology like Fascism, and a Western rationalism which sees too rigid a distinction between sanity and madness. I demonstrate how Lowry as an outsider reacts to the age of twentieth century World Wars. In Section Three, I discuss Naipaul's role as an outsider in the age of decolonisation, when bogus liberals and false redeemers fail to rebuild the newly independent post-colonial states. As in Conrad's case, I show how a failure to read Naipaul's ironic tone of voice has given rise to radically divergent views as to what he is about. I also link Conrad and Naipaul through their cultural negotiation between the 'centre' and its peripheries. By looking at these three writers in chronological order and offering a comparative perspective on their work, I highlight the outsider's disturbing, yet illuminating role within a historical context. I also draw attention to creative tensions between artistic concerns and a serious political purpose. I assess the outsider as observer and man of conscience rather than as a` mere onlooker. I conclude that the outsider also fulfils a social obligation by promoting critical awareness on the reader's side by means of his defamiliarising perspective

    Lowry and the Local

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    This essay concerns a group of drawings made and exhibited in 1930 by L. S. Lowry in Ancoats, then a notorious (and pictorially unpromising) Manchester slum. Though many are now lost, we know enough about those that survive to say something about the representational project they exemplify. What does it mean to draw a slum? Lowry, one of the few artists to take up this question, adopted a notably uninflected manner, descriptive, but not dramatic. His images depict, but do not preach, adopting a reserve that spoke to and of their local audience, the founders and patrons of the Manchester University Settlement. Hitherto unpublished documents establish this context, when studied alongside a wide range of other materials. These include contemporary maps and photographs, social and urban histories, and theories of drawing and knowledge

    Laniporchestia Lowry & Myers 2019

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    Laniporchestia Lowry & Myers, 2019 Platorchestia Bousfield, 1982: 26 (in part.) Platorchestia group 3 of Miyamoto & Morino, 2004: 69. Laniporchestia Lowry & Myers, 2019: 53, fig. 23. Type species. Platorchestia lanipo Richardson, 1991, monotypy. Included species. Laniporchestia contains 1 species: L. lanipo (Richardson, 1991). Ecological type. Tree/moss-hopper. Diagnostic description ( male ). Based on Richardson (1991). Head. Antenna 2 peduncular articles slender or slightly incrassate (?). Mandible left lacinia mobilis 5-cuspidate. Labium without inner lobes. Maxilliped palp slender; article 2 with distomedial lobe; article 4 reduced, button-shaped. Pereon. Gnathopod 1 sexually dimorphic; subchelate; coxa much smaller that coxa 2; posterior margin of carpus and propodus each with lobe covered in palmate setae; propodus anterior margin with 2 groups of robust setae, ‘subtriangular’ with well-developed posterodistal lobe, palm transverse; dactylus dactylation unknown. Gnathopod 2 subchelate; propodus palm acute, without palmar sinuses; without proximal spine or thumb defining palm; without large projection near dactylar hinge; dactylus slightly curved, longer than palm, attenuated distally. Pereopods 3–7 dactyli bicuspidactylate. Pereopod 4 subequal or slightly shorter than pereopod 3; carpus similar in length to that of pereopod 3; dactylus homobasidactylate, similar to pereopod 3 dactylus, not thickened proximally or notched. Pereopod 6 subequal in length to pereopod 7, not incrassate; basis moderately expanded; male merus expanded, carpus slightly or not expanded. Pereopod 7 not incrassate ; basis broadly expanded, posterior margin with distinct minute serrations, each with a small seta, posterodistal lobe present, shallow, broadly rounded; merus and carpus unexpanded, subrectangular; carpus shorter than propodus; propodus slender, length 8 × width; propodus without large distal tuft of setae. Oostegites (female) setae with simple smooth tips. Pleon. Pleopods all slightly reduced, rami not articulated, shorter than peduncles. Uropod 1 peduncle distolateral robust seta absent; exopod without marginal robust setae; endopod with marginal robust setae in 1 row. Uropod 2 exopod with marginal robust setae in 1 row; endopod with marginal robust setae in 1 row. Uropod 3 ramus shorter than peduncle. Telson apically incised, with 4 robust setae per lobe. Remarks. Laniporchestia is similar to the Japanese genus Morinoia. It differs from Morinoia Lowry & Myers, 2019 as follows: maxillipedal palp slender (broad in Morinoia); telson rounded distally (tapering distally in Morinoia). Distribution. Hawaii. Oahu (Richardson 1991).Published as part of Lowry, J. K. & Myers, A. A., 2022, Platorchestiinae subfam. nov. (Amphipoda, Senticaudata, Talitridae) with the description of three new genera and four new species, pp. 1-53 in Zootaxa 5100 (1) on page 23, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5100.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/612768

    Platorchestia smithi Lowry 2012, sp. nov.

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    Platorchestia smithi sp. nov. (Figs 8–10) Types. Holotype, 7.9 mm, AM P.85703, Brooms Head Beach, New South Wales (29.61145°S 153.33557°E), under algae (present for about two weeks) in the supralittoral zone at south end of beach near the headland, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 8 February 2010, NSW 3658. Paratypes: female, AM P.85704, same station data as holotype. Material examined. New South Wales. 5 males, 29 females and juveniles (only 1 ovigerous female), AM P.88063, Shelley Beach at Ballina, New South Wales (28.86613°S 153.59212°E), very flat, beach, talitrids at back of beach under woody debris and Pandanus leaves, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 6 February 2010, NSW 3656; 3 males, 99 females and juveniles (less than 5 ovigerous females), AM P.88064, Broadwater Beach, Broadwater National Forest, New South Wales (29.03237°S 153.45595°E), very flat, beach with talitrids under light vegetated debris, 5 m high dunes at back of beach leading into dense vegetation, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 6 February 2010, NSW 3655; 69 males, 251 females /juveniles, AM P.88065, Spooky Beach, Angourie, New South Wales (29.47958°S 153.35937°E), wide, very flat beach, bordering on vegetated boulder shelf, talitrids under pieces of dried algae, sticks and Pandanus fronds at back of beach, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 5 February 2010, NSW 3654; many specimens including 20+ males, AM P.88066, Brooms Head Beach, New South Wales (29.61145°S 153.33557°E), under algae (present for about two weeks) in the supralittoral zone at south end of beach near the headland, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 8 February 2010, NSW 3658; 15 males, 48 females and juveniles (3 ovigerous females), AM P.88067, Back Beach at Brooms Head, New South Wales (29.61662°S 153.33597°E), sandstone fingers emerging from vegetated dunes at back of beach, talitrids living at back of beach under light vegetative debris where freshwater seeps from dunes, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 8 February 2010, NSW 3657; 7 males, 48 females and juveniles, AM P.88068, Minnie Waters, New South Wales (29.76937°S 153.29471°E), supra-littoral, flat beach with main population of talitrids at back of beach where fresh water was seeping onto beach. Found less commonly under pieces of the brown alga Hormosira banksii, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 5 February 2010, NSW 3652; many specimens, AM P.88069, Wooli, New South Wales (29.87671°S 153.26378°E), under accumulated Zostera on sandy substrate at back of mangroves; J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 5 February 2010, NSW 3653; 5 males, 12 females /juveniles, AM P.88070, Little Beach at Red Rock, New South Wales, Australia (29.98272°S 153.23140°E), supra-littoral, flat broad beach with nearly vertical cliff faces at back of beach, talitrids sheltering under woody debris, Eucalyptus leaves, Casuarina needles, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 5 February 2010, NSW 3651; 61 males, 210 females /juveniles (20 ovigerous), AM P.88071, Arrawarra Beach, New South Wales (30.06129°S 153.19977°E), supralittoral zone, flat beach, huge accumulation of the brown kelp, Ecklonia at south end of beach near headland, present for about two days, talitrids living up the beach under dryer algae, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 9 February 2010, NSW 3659; 14 males, 69 females /juveniles (11 ovigerous), AM P.88072, Woolgoolga Beach, New South Wales (30.11119°S 153.20235°E), supralittoral zone, flat beach, gently sloping vegetated dune merging into top of beach, talitrids living under light algal debris at south end of beach near headland, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 9 February 2010, NSW 3660; many specimens, 8+ males, AM P.88073, Moonee Beach, New South Wales (30.21464°S 153.16106°E), rocky cove with a lot of woody debris, talitrids living under woody debris in supralittoral zone, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 9 February 2010, NSW 3661; 18 males, about 49 females /juveniles (5 ovigerous females), AM P.88074, Nambucca Heads, New South Wales (30.64939°S 153.01122°E), marine/brackish water pond separated from estuary by rocky training wall, talitrids living under heavy layer of Zostera and Casuarina needles, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 10 February 2010, NSW 3663; 8 males, about 80 females /juveniles, including 4 ovigerous females, AM P.88075, Scotts Head Beach, New South Wales (30.74589°S 152.99184°E), supralittoral, very flat beach beach, talitrids found under woody debris in small depression just before vegetated dunes near south end of beach near headland, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 11 February 2010, NSW 3664; 8 males, about 63 females /juveniles (none ovigerous), AM P.88076, Grassy Head Beach, New South Wales (30.79499°S 152.99788°E), supralittoral, flat beach beach, small population found under light woody debris at south end of beach near headland, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 11 February 2010, NSW 3665; 16 males, about 31 females /juveniles (13 ovigerous), AM P.88080, Oxley Beach, Port Macquarie, New South Wales (31.43433°S 152.92207°E), small, flat beach with headlands north and south, talitrids living in supralittoral under woody and grassy debris at south end of beach just below grassy covered hillside, none found under washed up Ecklonia, J.K. Lowry, J. Dermand & K. Engelberg, 12 February 2010, NSW 3667; many specimens, AM P.87702, landward edge of rock platform between Bateau Bay beach and Crackneck Lookout from sand under leaf litter and wrack at landward edge of Avicennia mangroves (33.3889°S 151.4842°E), S. Keable, R. Keable, 5 September 2011; many specimens, AM P.88077, Tarum Road, North Avoca Beach, New South Wales (33.45891°S 151.43981°E), dry stream bed running onto beach behind rock platform, talitrids common among wrack in stream bed, well above high water, wrack mainly small sticks and pieces of leaves, J.K. Lowry, 28 March 2010, NSW 3673; many specimens, AM P.88078, McMasters Beach, New South Wales (~ 33°29'57.55''S 151°25'29.00''E), flat sandy beach with almost no wrack, some dried Ecklonia, near the southern headland there is a storm water drain at the back of the beach with talitrids living here under large stones among accumulated sticks and leaves, J.K. Lowry, 28 March 2010, NSW 3674; 6 specimens, AM P.87947, Maitland Bay, New South Wales (33°31.512'S 151°23.780'E), L. Fanini & J.K. Lowry, November 2011; 217 specimens, AM P.85970, north end of Putty Beach, Bouddi National Park, Central Coast, New South Wales, Australia (33°31.715'S 151°22.445'E), upper supralittoral under patches of dead Zostera, J.K. Lowry & I. White, 22 April, 2011, MI NSW 3686 (stn 3); 16 males, 53 females and juveniles (12 females ovigerous), AM P.88079, Pearl Beach, New South Wales (33.54786°S 151.30737°E), at the absolute southern end of the beach there are talitrids living under small patches of dried brown algae in a depressed moist area at the back of the beach where the forest begins, J.K. Lowry, 28 March 2010, NSW 3675; 66 specimens, AM P. 87948, Portuguese Bay, New South Wales (33°36.656'S 151°18.096'E), L. Fanini & J.K. Lowry, November 2011; 1 male, 11 mm, AM P.85953 (illustrated), female, xx mm, AM P.85954 (illustrated), 9 specimens, AM P.85952, Palm Beach ferry wharf, Pittwater, New South Wales, Australia (33°35.756'S 151°19.194'E), on sand under beach wrack, J.K. Lowry and R. Peart; many specimens, AM P.85951, east of Spit Bridge, Middle Harbour, New South Wales, Australia (33°48'12"S 151°14'45"E), under rocks and woody debris, 29 August 2002, S. Keable, NSW 1965; 7 specimens, AM P.88081, Bellambi Beach, just north of boat ramp, New South Wales (34°22'13"S 150°55'35"E), sand under leaf litter and wrack at landward edge of Avicennia mangroves, J.K. Lowry & A. Bopiah, 28 April 2010; 18 males, 76 females and juveniles, AM P.84394, mouth of Minnamurra River, New South Wales (34°37'41"S 150°51'27"E), sound and gravel beach, A.D. Murray & S.J. Keable, 6 May 2010, NSW 3979, many specimens, AM P.84394, south end of Minnamurra River entrance, west of boat ramp, New South Wales (34°37'41"S 150°51'27"E), A. Hegedus, 6 May 2010; many specimens, AM P.84006, north end of Jones Beach, Kiama Downs, New South Wales (34°38'9"S 150°51'23"E), R. T. Springthorpe, 6 May 2010; 63 specimens, AM P.86727, southern end of Washerwoman's Beach near rocks, New South Wales (35°14'40"S 150°32'9"E), A. Hegedus, 25 August 2011; 127 specimens, AM P.86720, 79 specimens, AM P.86721, north end of Bendalong Beach near rocks, New South Wales (35°14'40"S 150°32'10"E), A. Hegedus, 23 August 2011. Type locality. Brooms Head Beach, New South Wales, Australia (29.61145°S 153.33557°E), under algae in the supralittoral zone at south end of beach near the headland. Description. Based on holotype, male, 7.9 mm, AM P.85703. Head. Eye medium (1/5–1/3 head length). Antenna 1 short, rarely longer than article 4 of antenna 2 peduncle. Antenna 2 more than half body length; peduncular articles incrassate (expanded); article 5 subequal than article 4; peduncular articles with many small robust setae. Lower lip with vestigial inner plates. Mandible left lacinia mobilis 5-dentate. Maxilliped palp article 2 distomedial lobe well developed, 4 reduced, button-shaped. Pereon. Gnathopod 1 sexually dimorphic; subchelate; coxa smaller than coxa 2, subtriangular, about as broad as deep; posterior margin of carpus and propodus each with lobe covered in palmate setae; propodus subrectangular, anterior margin with 3 groups of robust setae, lateral surface with 3 cuspidate setae, posterolateral surface with 6 serrate setae, posteromedial surface with 4 serrate setae; palm transverse, with 7 serrate setae; dactylus subequal in length to palm. Gnathopod 2 sexually dimorphic; subchelate; coxa similar in size to coxa 3, broader than deep; basis slightly expanded; ischium without posterodistal lobe on medial surface; posterior margin of merus, carpus and propodus each without with lobe covered in palmate setae; carpus triangular, reduced (enclosed by merus and propodus), posterior lobe absent, not projecting between merus and propodus; propodus 2.5 × as long as wide; palm acute, reaching 30% along posterior margin, with small sinus midway, lined with robust setae, without protuberance near dactylar hinge, with small midpalmar sinus, posterodistal corner with groove; posteromedial surface of propodus with groove; with cuticular patch at corner of palm; dactylus subequal in length to palm, not attenuated distally. Pereopods 2–4 coxae as wide as deep. Pereopods 3–7 cuspidactylate. Pereopods 3–7 dactyli without distal patch of many rows of tiny setae on the anterior margin. Pereopod 4 significantly shorter than pereopod 3; carpus significantly shorter than carpus of pereopod 3; dactylus similar to that of pereopod 3. Pereopod 5 propodus distinctly longer than carpus. Pereopod 6 shorter than pereopod 7; coxa posterior lobe posteroventral corner rounded, posterior margin perpendicular to ventral margin, posterior lobe with ridge, posterior lobe with 3–4 marginal setae. Pereopod 7 basis lateral sulcus present, slightly pronounced, posterodistal lobe present, rounded, produced downwards almost to merus; distal articles (merus and carpus) slender; merus posterior margin evenly rounded. Pleon. Pleopods all well developed. Pleopod 1 peduncle with marginal robust setae; biramous, outer ramus shorter than peduncle. Pleopod 2 biramous, outer ramus shorter than peduncle. Pleopod 3 biramous, outer ramus shorter than peduncle. Epimeron 2 longer than epimeron 3 (slightly). Epimeron 3 posterior margin minutely serrate, with 7 or 8 setae, posteroventral corner with small subacute tooth, ventral margin without robust setae. Uropod 1 not sexually dimorphic, peduncle with 11 robust setae, peduncle distolateral robust seta absent; inner ramus subequal in length to outer ramus, with 3 marginal robust setae; outer ramus without marginal robust setae. Uropod 2 not sexually dimorphic; peduncle with 4 robust setae; inner ramus subequal in length to outer ramus, with 1 marginal robust setae; outer ramus with 1 marginal robust setae. Uropod 3 peduncle with 3 robust setae; ramus longer than peduncle, ramus linear (narrowing), ramus with 2 marginal robust setae, ramus with more than 5 apical setae. Telson as broad as long, apically incised, dorsal midline entire, with marginal and apical robust setae, with 3–6 robust setae per lobe. Female (sexually dimorphic characters). Based on paratype, female, AM P.85704. Antenna 2 peduncular articles slender. Gnathopod 1 parachelate; posterior margin of merus, carpus and propodus each without lobe covered in palmate setae. Gnathopod 2 mitten-shaped; basis strongly expanded; posterior margin of carpus and propodus each with lobe covered in palmate setae; carpus well developed (not enclosed by merus and propodus), posterior lobe present, projecting between merus and propodus; palm obtuse, smooth, not lined with robust setae; without cuticular patch at corner of palm. Habitat. Under beach wrack on sand. Remarks. Platorchestia smithi is the common wide-spread beach-hopper along New South Wales ocean beaches. It belongs to the Platorchestia (group 2) complex with incrassate male second antennae and no sexual dimorphism in pereopods 6 or 7. These species are all similar. Platorchestia smithi is most similar to P. monodi in the shape of the male gnathopod 2 propodus palm, both of which have a weak proximal palmar sinus. Platorchestia smithi differs from P. monodi in having a relatively long propodus in relation to its width (2.5 ×) on male gnathopod 2 (1.3 × in P. monodi) and in the basis of pereopod 7 which is significantly longer (1.5 ×) than broad (about as long broad in P. monodi). Distribution. New South Wales: ocean beaches and bays from Shelley Beach at Ballina (29°S) to Bendalong Beach (35°S).Published as part of Lowry, J. K., 2012, Talitrid amphipods from ocean beaches along the New South Wales coast of Australia (Amphipoda, Talitridae), pp. 1-26 in Zootaxa 3575 on pages 14-1

    Lepidocupania Buerki, Callm., Munzinger & Lowry 2020, gen. nov.

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    Lepidocupania Buerki, Callm., Munzinger & Lowry, gen. nov. (Fig. 3A–C). Type: Lepidocupania lepidota (Radlk.) Buerki, Callm., Munzinger & Lowry (≡ Arytera lepidota Radlk.). = Cupaniopsis sect. Mizopetalum Radlk. in Sitzungsber. Math.-Phys. Cl. Königl. Bayer. Akad. Wiss. München 9: 588. 1879. Type: Cupaniopsis fruticosa Radlk. (≡ Lepidocupania fruticosa (Radlk.) Buerki, Callm., Munzinger & Lowry) (lectotype designated by ADEMA, 1991: 60). = Arytera sect. Azarytera Radlk. in Sitzungsber. Math.- Phys. Cl. Königl. Bayer. Akad. Wiss. München 9: 554. 1879. Type: Arytera arcuata Radlk. (≡ Lepidocupania arcuata (Radlk.) Buerki, Callm., Munzinger & Lowry) (lectotype designated by TURNER, 1995: 151). Trees or shrubs. Indument of short, straight, patent or appressed trichomes; glandular scales present on vegetative parts, inflorescence axes, pedicels, abaxial surface of calyx, pistil, and fruits; buds “varnished”. Leaves alternate, 1– 12-jugate; leaflets opposite to alternate, subsessile to petiolulate, margin entire to coarsely dentate. Inflorescences axillary or pseudo-terminal. Flowers zygomorphic or actinomorphic (in L. arcuata, L. brackenridgei, L. gracilipes, and L. lepidota), functionally unisexual; sepals (4 –)5(– 6), free and imbricate or united (in L. arcuata, L. brackenridgei, L. gracilipes, and L. lepidota) to form a dentate calyx cup; petals 5 (4 in L. glomeriflora), with 2 distinct scales; disc lobed or not (in L. arcuata, L. brackenridgei, L. gracilipes, and L. lepidota), rim glabrous to pilose; stamens (6–)8–9, anthers basifixed; ovary 2–3-locular. Fruit a capsule, with 2–3 well developed lobes, rarely 1 (in L. concolor, L. guillauminii, and L. samoensis), dehiscence loculicidal, glabrous to puberulous and rugose to verrucose outside, glabrous to pilose inside; seed ellipsoid or ovoid to globose, sarcotesta covering half to all of the seed, flesh-membranaceous. Distribution. – Lepidocupania comprises 21 species occurring in the Caroline Islands, Fiji, New Caledonia, Samoa, the Solomon Islands, and Vanuatu (Fig. 4). Notes. – Lepidocupania shares the presence of lepidote scales on its vegetative and reproductive organs with Lepiderema. However, Lepidocupania can easily be distinguished from Lepiderema by the presence (vs. absence) of petal and ovary scales, and it differs from Cupaniopsis by the presence (vs. absence) of glandular scales on its vegetative and fertile organs.Published as part of Buerki, Sven, Munzinger, Jérôme, Lowry Ii, Porter P. & Callmander, Martin W., 2020, Two new genera of Sapindaceae (Cupanieae) from the southern Pacific: Lepidocupania and Neoarytera, pp. 269-284 in Candollea 75 (2) on pages 273-274, DOI: 10.15553/c2020v752a9, http://zenodo.org/record/572490

    Lois Lowry

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    Provides an inside look at Lois Lowry, the author of popular novels for young reader

    Mrs. Willard L. Lowry and daughter with new television set

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    New Television- A living room feature of the Willard L. Lowry home, recently completed in Ridglea Hill, is this built-in television set. Beside it are Mrs. Lowry and daughter, Sharon. Published in Fort Worth Star-Telegram morning edition June 24, 1951.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/13098/thumbnail.jp

    Hoho Lowry & Fenwick 1983

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    <i>Hoho</i> Lowry & Fenwick, 1983 <p> <b>Diagnosis.</b> Modified after Lowry & Fenwick (1983). Head well developed eyes, with check notch/slit with rounded or subacute anteroventral corner; antenna 1 accessory flagellum short to minute; manidbular palp l-articulate, article 1 not distally swollen; maxillipedal palp distomedial flap on the third article; urosomite 1 dorsally bicarinate; rami of uropod 3 as short as peduncle; epimeron 3 smooth on lower posterior margin. The genus <i>Hoho</i> includes 10 species: <i>H. carteta</i> (J.L. Barnard, 1972); <i>H. cornishi</i> Hughes & Lowry, 2006; <i>H. fenwicki</i> <b>sp. nov</b>.; <i>H. hirtipalma</i> Lowry & Fenwick, 1983; <i>H. kalbarri</i> <b>sp. nov.</b>; <i>H. kangarooensis</i> <b>sp. nov.</b>; <i>H. lowryi</i> <b>sp. nov.</b>; <i>H. marilla</i> (J.L. Barnard, 1972); <i>H. tricarinata</i> <b>sp. nov.</b> and <i>H. wittecarra</i> <b>sp. nov</b>. New records in this study increase the range of the genus <i>Hoho</i> to Tasmania.</p>Published as part of <i>HUGHES, L. E., 2011, New species of Hoho, Mallacoota and Parelasmopus (Maeridae: Amphipoda) from Australian waters, pp. 1-79 in Zootaxa 2955 (1)</i> on page 5, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.2955.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10095686">http://zenodo.org/record/10095686</a&gt
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