200,828 research outputs found
Donna M. Whyte interview, 2018
Donna M. Whyte speaks about the importance of the education system in Shaker Heights, specifically Moreland, to her decision to move to and remain in Moreland. She also discusses the importance of community and identity in this interview
Maratus ottoi Baehr & Whyte 2016
Maratus ottoi Baehr & Whyte 2016 Maratus sp. Davies & Żabka 1989; Maratus ottoi Baehr & Whyte 2016; Whyte & Anderson 2017 Known only from the Brisbane area, the male M. ottoi has an octopus-like figure on the fan and the common name Octopus Peacock Spider.Published as part of Otto, Jürgen C. & Hill, David E., 2019, Catalogue of the Australian peacock spiders (Araneae: Salticidae: Euophryini: Maratus, Saratus), version 3, pp. 1-28 in Peckhamia 148 (3) on page 5, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.373253
Maratus julianneae Baehr & Whyte 2016
Maratus julianneae Baehr & Whyte 2016 Maratus julianneae Baehr & Whyte 2016; Whyte & Anderson 2017 This grassland species has been found only at Carnarvon Station, Queensland. The fan of the male resembles that of M. cinereus but legs III resemble those of M. anomalus and are displayed in a similar manner.Published as part of Otto, Jürgen C. & Hill, David E., 2019, Catalogue of the Australian peacock spiders (Araneae: Salticidae: Euophryini: Maratus, Saratus), version 3, pp. 1-28 in Peckhamia 148 (3) on page 2, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.373253
J.P. Whyte Is Appointed W&M Dean
WILLIAMSBURG -- James P. Whyte, Jr., acting dean of the Marshall-Wythe School of Law at the College of William and Mary for the past year, has been named dean, it was announced yesterday.
Dr. W. Melville Jones, vice president for academic affairs at William and Mary, said Whyte\u27s selection was approved by the executive committee of the college\u27s board of visitors after a 10-month search.
Dr. Davis Y. Paschall, college president, said Whyte has been largely responsible for the improved facilities, larger enrollment, and increased resources at the law school.
Whyte, a member of the law faculty here 12 years, is a native of Mississippi and a graduate of Bucknell University and the University of Colorado law school. He was a prosecuting attorney in McAlester, Okla., and a lawyer for a pipeline firm in Kansas City, Mo., before coming to William and Mary.
He serves as a judge for labor arbitration panels of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, the American Arbitration Service and Association, and the Virginia Department of Labor and Industry.
During World War II, he was a naval commander, a trial and defense counsel for general courts martial.
Whyte is married and the father of three sons. His wife is a former member of the Williamsburg School Board.
The law school here has about 200 students and a faculty of 15
Maratus eliasi Baehr & Whyte 2016
Maratus eliasi Baehr & Whyte 2016 Maratus eliasi Baehr & Whyte 2016 Males have a lateral flap on either side of the fan and prominent fringes of long, off-white setae on the inflatable spinnerets. Expansion of these flaps has not yet been observed. M. eliasi appears to be a close relative of M. ottoi and M. digitatus.Published as part of Otto, Jürgen C. & Hill, David E., 2019, Catalogue of the Australian peacock spiders (Araneae: Salticidae: Euophryini: Maratus, Saratus), version 3, pp. 1-28 in Peckhamia 148 (3) on page 5, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.373253
Weep no more, darling, weep no more [first line of chorus]
strophic with choruspiano and voiceJohns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box
120, Item 121Words by Whyte Melville, Esq. Composed by Claribel
Maratus licunxini Baehr & Whyte 2016
Maratus licunxini Baehr & Whyte 2016 Maratus licunxini Baehr & Whyte 2016 This species, named after Li Cunxin, artistic director of the Queensland Ballet, is very similar to M. fimbriatus with more convergence of the medial stripes toward the anterior of the fan. Photo by Joseph Schubert.Published as part of Otto, Jürgen C. & Hill, David E., 2019, Catalogue of the Australian peacock spiders (Araneae: Salticidae: Euophryini: Maratus, Saratus), version 3, pp. 1-28 in Peckhamia 148 (3) on page 7, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.373253
Maratus michaelorum Baehr & Whyte 2016
Maratus michaelorum Baehr & Whyte 2016 Maratus michaelorum Baehr & Whyte 2016 This species is known from Moolayember Creek National Park and nearby Carnarvon Gorge National Park in Queensland. The male resembles a small (3-4 mm long) M. pavonis. The female is unknown. Photo by Madeline Girard.Published as part of Otto, Jürgen C. & Hill, David E., 2019, Catalogue of the Australian peacock spiders (Araneae: Salticidae: Euophryini: Maratus, Saratus), version 3, pp. 1-28 in Peckhamia 148 (3) on page 3, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.373253
Weep no more, darling, weep no more [first line of chorus]
strophic with choruspiano and voiceJohns Hopkins University, Levy Sheet Music Collection, Box
120, Item 121Words by Whyte Melville, Esq. Composed by Claribel
Maratus eliasi Baehr & Whyte, sp. nov.
<i>Maratus eliasi</i> Baehr & Whyte, sp. nov. <p>(FIGURES 11 A, D, G, 12A‒I)</p> <p> <b>Material examined.</b> MALE HOLOTYPE (QM-S96335) from Australia, Queensland, Nuga Nuga National Park, 24°59’S, 148°40’E, M. Girard and D. Elias, 20 Oct. 2015, hand coll. PARATYPES: 1 male (QM-S73641) from Australia, Queensland, Boomer Ra. Mongrel Scub, 23°12’S, 149°46’E, G. Monteith, 16 Dec. 1999 ‒ 22 Mar. 2000, intercept.</p> <p> <b>Records.</b> 1 male, Australia, Queensland, Tregole National Park, 26°29’S, 147°06’E, M. Girard and D. Elias, 20 Oct. 2015, hand coll, deposited in M. Girard’s collection.</p> <p> <b>Etymology.</b> The specific name is a patronym in honour of Dr Damian Elias, who helped to discover new populations of <i>M. eliasi</i> while assisting his wife, Madeline Girard who was collecting specimens for her PhD work.</p> <p> <b>Diagnosis.</b> <i>M. eliasi</i> belongs to the <i>digitatus</i> group in having inflatable spinnerets (Fig. 12 A) <i>M. eliasi</i> is closely related to <i>M. digitatus</i> (mentioned in Otto & Hill, 2015: fig. 37 as <i>Maratus</i> cf. <i>digitatus</i>) sharing a nearly identical prosomal colour pattern and in having a larger pair of semicircular, iridescent, flaps which are uniformly dark green in <i>M. digitatus</i>.</p> <p> <i>M. eliasi</i> can be separated from <i>M. digitatus</i> by its opisthosomal colour pattern (golden and striped flaps) (Fig. 12 A) and its shorter embolic tip (Figs 11 B, E).</p> <p> <b>Description. Male</b> (Holotype, QM-S96335). Total length 3.98. Prosoma 2.12 long, 1.60 wide, pl/pw 1.32; sternum 0.91 long, 0.52 wide, sl/sw 1.75; abdomen 1.86 long, 1.44 wide; abdomen wider than long when inflated, (ol/ow 0.68; QM-S73641). Ocular quadrangle 0.93 long. Anterior eye row 1.51, posterior eye row 1.54 wide. AME largest; posterior eye group width 0.92 of caput width; AME 0.47; ALE 0.27; PME 0.23; PLE 0.08; AME‒AME 0.04; AME‒ALE 0.03; PME‒PME 1.19; PME‒PLE 0.180; ALE‒PLE 0.22. Clypeus 0.22 high. Paturon with no promarginal teeth and one retromarginal tooth. Length of leg III, femur: 1.54, patella: 0.65, tibia: 0.88, metatarsus: 0.75, tarsus: 0.52; metatarsus III 0.85 the length of tibia III. Leg formula: 3421. Prosoma dark brown; ocular quadrangle covered with golden setae scattered with white setae forming three bands, sides with a fringe, a posterior median patch and two lateral patches of white setae; AME and ALE dorsally with a fringe of golden setae, ventrally with a fringe of white setae. Endites distally pale; labium, chelicerae and sternum medium brown with darker reticulation; opisthosoma bluish iridescent, a dancing monster with a red head and arms and blue eyes when seen from the front, flaps golden with one black and two white stripes; venter pale. Leg I‒IV covered with white setae; tibiae and metatarsi I‒IV dark brown tarsi I‒IV pale. Male palp (Figs 11 A, D, G, 12G‒I): cymbium short, 1.6 times longer than wide, covered with white setae, prolateral distal half with stronger dark satae; tip stout with distal scopula. Embolic disc wider than long, with broad, flat front and flat retrolateral groove; with few small tooth-like denticules at the retrocentral part of the disc; embolus tip with triangular retrolateral ridge embolic opening pipe or chimney-shaped; finger-like lateral process of embolic disc with pancake-stack shaped retrolateral ridges; tegular shoulder with cone-shaped lamella (LTS); retrobasal tegular lobe (TL) with broader tip only prolateral side concave (Fig. 12 H); patella and tibia covered with long white setae covering 1/2 of the cymbium retolaterally; retrolateral tibial apophysis narrow, finger-shaped.</p> <p> <b>Female.</b> Unknown.</p> <p> <b>Distribution.</b> Known only from Queensland.</p>Published as part of <i>Baehr, Barbara C. & Whyte, Robert, 2016, The Peacock Spiders (Araneae: Salticidae: Maratus) of the Queensland Museum, including six new species, pp. 501-525 in Zootaxa 4154 (5)</i> on pages 515-518, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4154.5.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/255783">http://zenodo.org/record/255783</a>
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