190,161 research outputs found
Athol Manning
"Athol Manning No. 4700 R.A.A.F. No 12 Squadro[n] June 1941 - Oct. 1942".Athol Manning, Number 4700. Royal Australian Air Force, Number 12 Squadro[n]. June 1941 - October 1942.Date:199
Portrait of George R. Manning, Superintendent of Contract Department, Seabrook Farms
Portrait of Seabrook Farms' Superintendent of Contract Department, George R. Manning
Jesse Robert Manning Collection
Dr. J. R. Manning was elected Head of the Department of Business Administration at the South Texas Teachers College in 1925. Throughout his forty-four year career, from 1925 to 1969, Dr. Manning directed the growth and direction of the Business Administration Department and was actively involved with several business-related student fraternities and clubs. Upon his retirement in 1969, the University named the building that housed the Business Administration Department since 1925 in his honor, Manning Hall. He went on to become Kingsville's mayor for three terms. Dr. J. R. Manning was given the status of Professor Emeritus in 1982 and he was the last surviving member of the original faculty of the South Texas State Teachers College, now Texas A&M University-Kingsville. His papers show his academic achievements and his dedication to the Business Administration Department and the University
Bob Manning & son: soul, inheritance, and forgotten stories
Bob Manning & Son is a long-form multimedia nonfiction essay based on interviews, historical research, and personal accounts. The essay documents the life of Swedish-American soul singer, Bob Manning, and explores the familial inheritance of his children, primarily through the perspective of his son, Matthew Manning (author)
Three men at the entrance of a tent
No. 12 Squadron camp September - October 1942, at Batchelor. The occasion was a farewell, probably of personnel, as the squadron remained until late 1943-44 before moving to Meneling in the No. 61.
Left to Right: Sgt A. Manning, LAC Lloyd Smith, Cpl R. Parkes.
No. 12 Squadron camp area west of airfield adjaunt to present Meneling Rd.Manning, A. J.Date:194
Three men
No. 12 Squadron camp September - October 1942, at Batchelor. The occasion was a farewell, probably of personnel, as the squadron remained until late 1943-44 before moving to Meneling in the No. 61.
Left to Right: Sgt A. Manning, LAC Lloyd Smith, Cpl R. Parkes.
No. 12 Squadron camp area west of airfield adjaunt to present Meneling Rd.Manning, A. J.Date:194
Manning, C F R, 400230
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/401334Surname: MANNING. Given Name(s) or Initials: C F R. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 400230. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 6200.220980
Item: [2016.0049.33627] "Manning, C F R, 400230
Sindheres KAZMI & MANNING 2003, gen. nov.
<i>Sindheres</i> gen. nov. <p> <i>Diagnosis.</i> Size small, carapace 3.25 mm long, 5.0 mm wide in a unique holotype. Carapace sub-hexagonal, narrowing anteriorly, width greater than length, width greatest posterior to mid-length; regions poorly defined. Front very slightly projecting. MXP3 exopod with flagellum; ischium and merus indistinguishably fused, elongate; inner margin convex; palp three-segmented; propodus spatulate, longer than carpus, dactylus styliform, inserted below mid-length of ventral margin of propodus. Walking legs equal right and left; WL2 longest of walking legs, WL1–3 dactyli similar, subequal, falcate, strongly curved to sharp apex; WL4 dactylus slightly shorter than dactyli of WL1–3. Female abdomen of seven free somites, abdomen extended beyond bases of legs. Male unknown.</p> <p> <i>Type species. Sindheres karachiensis</i> new species, by present designation and monotypy.</p> <p> <i>Etymology.</i> An arbitrary combination of the name of the Pakistan province of Sindh and the ending - <i>eres</i>. The gender is musculine.</p> <p> <i>Remarks.</i> Members of <i>Sindheres</i> can be distinguished at once from members of <i>Pinnotheres</i> Bosc, 1802, in having the dactylus of MXP3 inserted near the midlength of the ventral margin of the propodus (Manning, 1993: figure 1 (c)), rather than at its base (Manning, 1993: figure 1 (b)). In this feature <i>Sindheres</i> resembles the eastern Atlantic <i>Nepinnotheres</i> Manning, 1993, but in members of <i>Nepinnotheres</i> the carapace is sub-circular, with the length and width subequal, rather than subhexagonal, with the length much shorter than the width. In <i>Sindheres</i>, the mesial margin of the MXP3 ischium-merus is convex, whereas in <i>N. pinnotheres</i> the mesial margin of MXP3 is slightly concave proximally with an obtuse projection subdistally.</p>Published as part of <i>KAZMI, Q. B. & MANNING, R. B., 2003, A new genus and species of pinnotherid crab from Karachi, northern Arabian Sea (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura), pp. 1085-1089 in Journal of Natural History 37 (9)</i> on page 1086, DOI: 10.1080/00222930110108353, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/4675206">http://zenodo.org/record/4675206</a>
Letter from Mrs. O.R. Manning to John Sloan, December 11, 1939
1 leaf (double-sided)Letter from Mrs. O.R. Manning to John Sloan, December 11, 193
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