8 research outputs found
Bishop's School, The
General view, looking southeast, showing the chapel and bell tower; "The Bishop's School is a private college preparatory Episcopalian day school located in La Jolla. Bishop's was founded in 1909. Originally it was a boarding school for girls only. The earliest parts of the campus were designed by architect Irving Gill. The current tower building was designed by Carleton Monroe Winslow, a replacement for the original Gill tower. The elements that are designated historic include Bentham Hall (Irving Gill, 1910), Scripps Hall (Irving Gill, 1910-1911), Gilman Hall (Irving Gill and Louis Gill, 1916), St. Mary's Chapel (Carleton Winslow, 1916), The Tower (Carleton Winslow, 1930), Wheeler J. Bailey Library (Carleton Winslow, 1935). The style owes a major debt to Spanish architecture in California as well as the Arts and Crafts Movement. Source: Wikipedia; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page (accessed 7/7/2010
Indian Arts Building
Looking up at projecting center of east facade and open bell gables; It was designed by Carleton Winslow in 1912 with help from supervising architect Bertram Goodhue. Frank P. Allen, Jr. the Exposition's Director of Works, supervised the construction and H. L. Schmohl fashioned exterior ornament, after drawings supplied by Winslow. The projecting facade of the east side facing the Plaza de Panama, which covered an arcade at the lower level, was taken from the facade of the Sanctuary of Guadalupe in Guadalajara, Mexico. The reference was a photograph in Sylvester Baxter's book, Spanish-Colonial Architecture in Mexico. (Baxter. Vol. 10, plate 137). During the 1935-1936 exhibition the building was renamed the House of Charm, by which name it is still known today. In 1989 the city of San Diego decided to tear down and rebuild the House of Charm, along with the House of Hospitality which was in similar disrepair. The recreated House of Charm building was reopened on September 21, 1996, with external features carefully duplicating the original highly ornamented exterior. The building now houses the Museum of the Living Artist (MoLA) and the Mingei International Museum. Source: San Diego History Center; https://www.sandiegohistory.org/ (accessed 7/27/2013
Lath Palace
Koi (carp) in Lilly Pond outside the Botanical Building; Built for the 1915-1916 Exposition, along with the adjacent Lily Pond, the historic building is one of the largest lath structures in the world. The Botanical Building plantings include more than 2,100 permanent plants including collections of cycads, ferns, orchids, other tropical plants, and palms. The first drawing for the building by Carleton M. Winslow, Goodhue's architect on site, shows another ornate Spanish-Renaissance front and lateral wings, but the end design was more simplified and functional. Steel trusses in vaults and dome support 70,000 feet of redwood lath (used to shade the plantings), which is curved to conform to the shape of the building. The Lily Pond is a result of Goodhue's exposure to reflecting pools on a trip to Persia in 1902. The structure was restored and repainted in 2002. (The dark brown color is not original). Source: San Diego History Center; https://www.sandiegohistory.org/ (accessed 7/24/2013
Food and Beverage Building
oai:dome.mit.edu:1721.3/153161South facade of the south building, facing El Prado; west pavilion, detail, window and balcony; In 1915 this was named the Varied Industries and Food Products Building; renamed the Food and Beverage Building for the 1935 fair, and rebuilt in 1971 as the Casa del Prado. It was conceived as a temporary exhibit building in 1915, so built of plaster and wood. The reconstructed building (architect Richard George Wheeler with Sam Hamill, consulting architect) consists of two separate north and south buildings separated by an open arcaded court. Sculptural details executed by H. R. Schmohl, after Winslow's sketches; the original 1915 decoration was saved by molding it and casting it in concrete with metal reinforcement and with anchoring rods inserted. The cast concrete ornament weighed ten times more than the originals. This demanded that the supporting building be entirely rebuilt in concrete with a sprayed-on, tan-tinted, off-white stucco veneer. Some of the building elements (an annex and apse) were eliminated in the rebuilding. It now houses a theater and club meeting and exhibits rooms. Source: San Diego History Center; https://www.sandiegohistory.org/ (accessed 7/26/2013
Investigating the roles of the alternative Isoforms of the preTCR alpha (pTα) chain in T cell development
PhDThe pre-T cell receptor (preTCR) is required for αβ T cell development and hence efficient adaptive immunity. Composed of a rearranged TCRβ chain paired with the invariant preTCR α chain (pTα), it drives immature thymocytes through the “β-selection” checkpoint, promoting differentiation, proliferation and survival. Although two functional splice isoforms of pTα exist, non-redundant roles for pTαa and pTαb have yet to be ascribed.
This thesis demonstrates that pTαa and pTαb display non-identical expression patterns in immature thymocyte subsets. Moreover, it demonstrates that preTCRa and preTCRb promote divergent T cell development; preTCRa drives prolonged expansion of post-β-selection thymocytes, while preTCRb drives rapid maturation of TCRαβ(+) cells. Importantly, by mutating charged residues in the extracellular domain of pTα, it is shown that pTα oligomerization is not required for preTCR signalling per se, as had previously been proposed. Instead, the capacity for oligomerization regulates surface preTCR levels, which in turn dictates subsequent developmental potential.
This thesis also presents preliminary evidence for a novel role for the preTCR; that preTCR signalling sensitises the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathway that in turn regulates the signalling thresholds for positive and negative selection in CD4(+)CD8(+) double positive (DP) cells. Indeed, it is suggested that this process may be critical for central tolerance in the thymus.
Finally, this thesis describes the generation and initial characterisation of pTαa and pTαb BAC transgenic mice that will facilitate the separate investigation of pTαa and pTαb in a pTα-deficient background in vivo.
Collectively, the results presented in this thesis ascribe non-redundant roles for the two isoforms of pTα and necessitate a fresh examination of the mechanism by which the preTCR initiates signalling. The implications of these results for αβ T cell development and the immune system as a whole are discussed
Pseudopolydesmus serratus
Pseudopolydesmus serratus (Say, 1821) Fig. 2-4 Diagnosis. A large-bodied species of Pseudopolydesmus possessing acropodal processes m1, m2, e2, and e 4 in addition to the endomerite (Fig. 2-3) (Withrow 1988). Variation. Hoffman (1974) proposed a terminology for the maximum of four processes on both the mesal (m) and ectal/lateral (e) surfaces of Pseudopolydesmus acropodites. Species are defined by the processes that are present, and P. serratus is the only one specifically possessing m1, m2, e2, and e4, and lacking the others (Fig. 2-3); gonopod illustrations of eastern males are available in Wood (1865), Williams and Hefner (1928), Verhoeff (1931), Attems (1898, 1940), Johnson (1954), and Shelley (1978, 1988). The North Dakota male possesses these projections, but they vary in both configurations and positions from those in eastern males, as represented by Shelley (1978: 60, fig. 54-55, and 1988: 1651, fig. 28). In the North Dakota male, the endomerite, or pulvillus/hairpad, located on the mesal surface, seems slightly longer in proportion to overall acropodal length, and m1, which is proportionally longer, stronger, and positioned slightly more distad, overlaps its basal corner; m1 is more proximal and does not overlap the pulvillus in eastern males. Process m2 is at the same position as in eastern males but appears more proximal because of the proportionally longer endomerite; m2 is also smaller and slightly bilobate, whereas it is stronger, acutely triangular, and projects farther from the acropodal stem in eastern males. On the lateral surface, e2 is sharply triangular, as in eastern males, but slightly more proximal and not directly opposite m2; however, e2 is in the same position relative to the endomerite as in eastern males, at the latter’s distal extremity. Process e4, located distad and partly obscured in both perspectives by the bristle-like apical setae, is a linear, inconspicuous, bilobate flange rather than triangular. These differences constitute intra-specific variation that may warrant subspecific recognition if additional males from the Dakotas and Minnesota exhibit these conditions. Variation of this magnitude in peripheral populations is typical in millipeds with such large distributions. Distribution (Fig. 4). Oriulus venustus, the most widespread native milliped species in North America, covers approximately ¾ of the continental US and southern Canada, ranging from the Atlantic Coast of Massachusetts and the Outer Banks of North Carolina to the Colorado Plateau and Wasatch Mountains, Utah, the Rocky Mountains of Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming, and the western Plains of Alberta; the southernmost records are in southern Louisiana (Shelley 2002a, c). Aniulus garius occupies a smaller, more northerly area extending from southern Québec, western New York, and northern Virginia to the Alberta Plains and northeastern Utah; the southernmost records in the contiguous range are in Kentucky, Missouri, and northern New Mexico, and there is an isolated site in western Mississippi (Shelley 2001a, McAllister et al. 2009). Other widespread, native, eastern species – Virgoiulus minutus (Brandt, 1841) (Julida: Blaniulidae), N. americanus, Scytonotus granulatus (Say, 1821) (Polydesmida: Polydesmidae), and the xystodesmids Apheloria virginiensis (Drury, 1770) and Pleuroloma flavipes – terminate varying distances into the Central Plains (Keeton 1960; Shelley 1980, 1994; Hoffman 1999; McAllister et al. 2005; Shelley and McAllister 2007; Shelley et al. 2003, 2005, 2006) as does Pseudopolydesmus serratus (Fig. 3). Ranging eastward to the Atlantic Ocean and even inhabiting offshore islands – Nantucket, Massachusetts; Gardiners, New York (in Gardiners Bay at the eastern end of Long Island); and Hatteras, North Carolina – Pseudopolydesmus serratus extends, north/south, from the Gaspé Peninsula, Québec, the Upper Peninsula (UP) of Michigan/adjacent Ontario, and the latitude of Fargo to Matagorda Bay, Texas, the Gulf Coast from Louisiana to east of the Apalachicola River in the Florida Panhandle, and central South Carolina. Dimensions vary from 1,139 -2,278 km (712-1,424 mi), east/west, and 1,402 -1,986 km (876-1,241 mi), north/south. As noted by Hoffman (1999), the species has never been taken in, and is apparently absent from, the southeastern Coastal Plain south of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, including peninsular Florida, and the entire state of Georgia, though it may occur in the southwestern corner (Seminole and Decatur cos.); occurrence cannot even be demonstrated in the southern Blue Ridge Physiographic Province of north Georgia, where the genus is common. The occupied area covers parts of three Canadian Provinces (Ontario, Québec, and New Brunswick), 36 US states plus the District of Columbia, and all of 23 states: Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, Mississippi, Iowa, Missouri, Arkansas, and Louisiana. It traverses such major rivers as the St. Lawrence, Connecticut, Hudson, Delaware, Potomac, James, Roanoke, Cape Fear, Apalachicola, Alabama, Mississippi, Ohio, Tennessee, Cumberland, Wabash, Illinois, St. Croix, Red (of the North), Platte, Missouri, Arkansas, Canadian, Red (in Louisiana), Trinity, Brazos, and Colorado (in Texas). The eastern- and northernmost record is the unspecified site in the interior of the Gaspé Peninsula, Québec, Canada (Chamberlin 1920a, Kevan 1983, Shelley 1988, Hoffman 1999), denoted by the question mark (?) in Fig. 4. The eastern- and northernmost specific locality, Île d’Orléans, in the St. Lawrence River east of Québec City, implies occurrence in northwestern New Brunswick, and documentation is needed from this Canadian province. The sites in Algoma and Nipissing cos., Ontario, coincide with those in the UP of Michigan, but the true northern limits, in the interiors of Québec and Ontario, are unknown. The records from Fargo and Cass and Clearwater cos., Minnesota, also coincide with those in the UP and suggest occurrence in southeastern Manitoba, Canada, only 211 km (132 mi) to the north. In addition to being the northernmost locality in the northern Plains, Fargo is also the westernmost, so the boundary turns southward there, heads into eastern Nebraska, curves southwestward to Thayer Co., and angles across Kansas to Barber Co., on the border with Oklahoma and the westernmost overall record. In addition to Georgia, no samples of P. serratus are available from South Dakota, Oklahoma, and Rhode Island, as well as New Brunswick, and we sampled in the projected area of occurrence in South Dakota but did not encounter any polydesmids. Connecting Barber Co., Kansas, with the westernmost Texas locality, in Coryell Co., results in ¾ of the main part of Oklahoma lying within the distribution, roughly equivalent to the area in that state occupied by Narceus Rafinesque, 1820 (Shelley et al. 2006). From Coryell Co., the boundary curves south-southeastward through Victoria to the Gulf of Mexico at Matagorda Bay. Records from Louisiana, Mississippi, and the western Florida Panhandle line the Gulf Coast, but P. serratus terminates abruptly in Gadsden Co., east of the Apalachicola River. A plethora of records hugs the Atlantic Coast from Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, to Maine, where the border extends inland to Baxter State Park and New Brunswick, but at Myrtle Beach, it heads inland to Columbia then bends northward to Gaston and Lincoln cos., North Carolina, west of Charlotte. It then swings westward through the Blue Ridge (Mitchell Co.) and northern Tennessee, curves through the Cumberland Plateau and Nashville Basin, and angles south-southeastward through Alabama to Gadsden Co. The range thus also excludes most of eastern Alabama, the areas of Knoxville and Chattanooga, Tennessee, the entire Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP) except for Cades Cove, Blount Co., Tennessee, and all of southwestern North Carolina except for one site in Jackson Co.; the isolated records appear to represent localized allopatric populations. Withrow (1988) recorded a female of P. serratus from the GSMNP in Sevier Co., Tennessee, but it lacks credence without an accompanying male, and no other author has cited the species from the Park, the most recent being Snyder (2008). Therefore, the Cades Cove samples we report, primarily from the All Taxa Biodiversity Inventory (ATBI), are the first authentic records from both the Park and the Great Smoky Mountains in general. In western North Carolina, no individuals are available from the heavily sampled Nantahala and southern Pisgah National Forests or the vicinities of Mt. Mitchell, Asheville, Waynesville, Brevard, Cashiers, Bryson City, Franklin, and Highlands. The Jackson Co. locality is some 128 km (80 mi) south of Mitchell Co., which is detached by 40 km (25 mi) from the next one north in Watauga Co., after which P. serratus occurs continuously northward through Virginia and eastward into the North Carolina Piedmont Plateau. Consequently, the next locality south of Jackson Co., North Carolina, is that in Gadsden Co., Florida, some 584 km (365 mi) to the south-southwest. Copious field work by numerous collectors has taken place in the Blue Ridge of northern Georgia, and RMS has sampled widely in the Piedmont Plateaus and Coastal Plains of Georgia and South Carolina; consequently, it would seem that at least one male would have been taken in these areas by now if P. serratus truly occurred there. Its absence creates a sizeable lacuna in the southeast that extends northwestward from coastal Georgia to Cannon and Putnam cos., Tennessee, a distance of about 656 km (410 mi); the hiatus is somewhat narrower, around 496 km (310 mi) at maximal breadth. This gap seems analogous to that of its polydesmid counterpart, Scytonotus granulatus (Say, 1821), which is absent from a progressively narrowing area of the Blue Ridge from northern Georgia to northern Virginia, in which it is replaced by three endemic forms. In conjunction with a generic revision, Shelley (1994) concluded that the endemics are younger and perhaps more successful, that they had displaced S. granulatus from the Blue Ridge, and that they were actively expanding into adjacent physiographic provinces. The lacunae in the two polydesmids are congruent in being in southern range extremities and involving at least the southernmost Blue Ridge, suggesting that the causes may be similar; at present, however, we can only note that P. canadensis (Newport, 1844) and P. erasus (Loomis, 1943) occur in the hiatus (Withrow 1988, Hoffman 1999). Another distributional congruence involves the xystodesmid genus, Apheloria Chamberlin, 1929 (Shelley and McAllister 2007), whose range also turns inland at Myrtle Beach, angles northwestward in South Carolina north of that of P. serratus, crosses into North Carolina around Charlotte and curves into the western Piedmont before heading southward into through the Blue Ridge. A modern revision of Pseudopolydesmus is desirable, to assess both the true number of component species and evolutionary trends within the genus. Below, we summarize published records of P. serratus and report significant new county occurrences along with data for prior citations. Published Records. America Septentrionale (Gervais 1844). CANADA: Ontario: Ontario in general (Kevan 1983, Shelley 2002c). Northern Ontario (Kevan 1983). Algoma, Cochrane, Durham, Hastings, Lambton, Lanark, Middlesex, Niagara, Nipissing, and Parry Sound cos. (Chamberlin 1920a, b; Judd 1967; Shelley 1988). Québec: Québec in general (Hoffman 1999). Southern Québec (Withrow 1988). Gaspé Peninsula interior (Chamberlin 1920a, Kevan 1983, Shelley 1988, Hoffman 1999). Argenteuil, Gaspé-Ouest, Île de Montréal, Montmorency, and Vaudreuil census divisions (cd) (Kevan 1983, Shelley 1988). USA: Alabama: Lowndes Co. (Withrow 1988). Arkansas: Craighead, Jefferson, Phillips, Poinsett, and Pulaski cos. (Causey 1952b, Withrow 1988, McAllister et al. 2003). Connecticut: New Haven Co. (Withrow 1988). Florida: Bay, Escambia, and Gadsden cos. (McNeill 1887, Shelley 2001b). Illinois: Illinois in general (Wood 1865, Saussure and Humbert 1872, Bollman 1887). Adams, Calhoun, Champaign, Cook, Grundy, Jackson, Lake, and Rockford cos. (Withrow 1988). Indiana: Indiana in general (Bollman 1887, 1888b). Franklin, Grant, Greene, Monroe, Owen, Porter, Tippecanoe, and Vandenburg cos. (McNeill 1888, Dearolf 1938, Withrow 1988). Iowa: Iowa in general (Withrow 1988). Blackhawk, Boone, and Storey cos. (Chamberlin 1942, Chamberlin and Hoffman 1958, Withrow 1988, Hoffman 1999). Kansas: Kansas in general (Gunthorp 1921). Coffey and Johnson cos. (Gunthorp 1913, Withrow 1988) Kentucky: Adair, Anderson, Bell, Carstian, Carter, Christian, Estill, Fayette, Fulton, Holmes, Jackson, Jessamine, McCreary, Morgan, Powell, Whitley, and Wolf cos. (Causey 1955, Branson and Batch 1971, Withrow 1988). Louisiana. Louisiana in general (Chamberlin and Hoffman 1958). Allen, Ascension, Avoyelles, Bossier, Caddo, Caldwell, Catahoula, DeSoto, East Baton Rouge, East Carroll, East Feliciana, Evangeline, Iberia, Jefferson Davis, Lafayette, Lincoln, Livingston, Madison, Morehouse, Natchitoches, Plaquemines, Pointe - Coupee, Rapides, Sabine, St. Landry, St. Martin, St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, Tensas, Terrebonne, Vermilion, Vernon, Washington, West Baton Rouge, West Carroll, and West Feliciana pars. (Chamberlin 1918a; Viosca 1919; Causey 1952 b, 1963; Loomis 1959; Withrow 1988). Maine: Maine in general (Chamberlin and Hoffman 1958, Kevan 1983). Piscataquis Co. (Shelley 1988). Maryland: Allegany, Anne Arundel, Calvert, Caroline, Charles, Dorchester, Frederick, Garrett, Harford, Montgomery, Prince Georges, Queen Anne’s, St. Mary’s, Somerset, Talbot, and Washington cos. (Chamberlin 1947, 1951; Withrow 1988). Massachusetts: Barnstable, Middlesex, and Norfolk cos., and Nantucket Island (Blake 1931, Withrow 1988). Michigan: Michigan in general (Johnson 1954, Kevan 1983, Hoffman 1999). Alcona, Alger, Arenac, Barry, Bay, Cheboygan, Clare, Crawford, Dickinson, Emmet, Gladwin, Gogebic, Grand Traverse, Gratiot, Iosco, Jackson, Kalkaska, Lake, Lapeer, Leelanau, Livingston, Mackinac, Macomb, Manistee, Missaukee, Montcalm, Newaygo, Oceana, Ogemaw, Ontonagon, Osceola, Otsego, Presque Isle, Roscommon, Sanilac, Tuscola, and Washtenaw cos. (Chamberlin 1914, Withrow 1988, Snider 1991). Minnesota: Minnesota in general (Bollman 1887, 1893; Chamberlin and Hoffman 1958; Hoffman 1999). Hennepin and Winona cos. (Bollman 1893, Withrow 1988). Mississippi: Mississippi in general (Hoffman 1999). Adams, George, Hinds, Jefferson, Lincoln, Oktibbeha, Panola, Pearl River, Pike, Webster, and Wilkinson cos. (Causey 1955, Withrow 1988). Missouri: Franklin, St. Charles, and St. Louis cos. (Chamberlin 1928, Withrow 1988). Though geographically plausible, the record from St. Charles Co. was based on unidentifiable juveniles and is unreliable. Nebraska: Nebraska in general (Kenyon 1893a). Cass, Cuming, Lancaster, and Richardson cos. (Kenyon 1893b). New Jersey: New Jersey in general (Wood 1865, Saussure and Humbert 1872). Camden and Somerset cos. (Chamberlin 1947, Withrow 1988). New York: New York in general (Bailey 1928, Kevan 1983). Albany, Genesee, Greene, Monroe, Niagara, Onondaga, Tompkins, and Ulster cos. (Chamberlin 1947, Withrow 1988). North Carolina: North Carolina in general (Bollman 1887, Chamberlin and Hoffman 1958, Hoffman 1999). Mountains of North Carolina (Chamberlin and Hoffman 1958). Alleghany, Ashe, Beaufort, Bertie, Brunswick, Burke, Carteret, Caswell, Chowan, Craven, Cumberland, Currituck, Dare, Durham, Edgecombe, Franklin, Gaston, Gates, Granville, Greene, Halifax, Harnett, Hyde, Lee, Jackson, Johnston, Jones, Lee, Lincoln, Mitchell, Montgomery, Moore, Nash, New Hanover, Northampton, Onslow, Orange, Perquimans, Pitt, Randolph, Sampson, Stanly, Stokes, Vance, Wake, Warren, Watauga, and Wilkes cos. (Brimley 1938; Chamberlin 1940; Wray 1967; Shelley 1978, 2000; Withrow 1988). Ohio: Ohio in general (Williams and Hefner 1928, Kevan 1983). Adams, Ashland, Ashtabula, Butler, Champaign, Clermont, Columbiana, Coshocton, Fairfield, Geauga, Gallia, Greene, Hamilton, Highland, Hocking, Holmes, Jefferson, Knox, Lake, Licking, Medina, Montgomery, Ottawa, Pike, Summit, Tuscarawas, Warren, Washington, and Wayne cos.(Morse 1902, Chamberlin 1920 c, Withrow 1988). Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania in general (Koch 1847; Peters 1865; Wood 1865; Saussure and Humbert 1872; Bollman 1887, 1893; Attems 1898, 1940; Chamberlin and Hoffman 1958; Withrow 1988). Bedford, Berks, Bradford, Bucks, Chester, Delaware, McKean, Mifflin, Montgomery, Perry, Seward, and York cos. and the City of Philadelphia (Dearolf 1938, Loomis 1939, Chamberlin 1947, Withrow 1988). South Carolina: South Carolina in general (Saussure 1860; Bollman 1893; Attems 1898, 1940). Richland Co. (Withrow 1988). Tennessee: Tennessee in general (Hoffman 1999). Anderson, Davidson, Haywood, Humphreys, Obion, Putnam, Rutherford, and Sevier cos. (Chamberlin 1918b, Withrow 1988). Texas: Eastern Texas (Withrow 1988). Camp, Cass, Harris, Jasper, Lamar, Nacogdoches, Sabine, Smith, and Tyler cos. (Causey 1952b, Stewart 1969, McAllister and Robison 2011). Vermont: Bennington, Washington, and Windham cos. (Chamberlin 1951, Withrow 1988). Virginia: Virginia in general (Gervais 1847, 1859; Saussure and Humbert 1872; Bollman 1893). Eastern Shore in general (Say 1821, Chamberlin and Hoffman 1958, Hoffman 1999). Accomack, Albemarle, Alleghany, Augusta, Botetourt, Buchanan, Caroline, Chesterfield, Clarke, Craig, Dinwiddie, Fairfax, Frederick, Giles, Grayson, Greene, Hanover, Henrico, Highland, Loudoun, Louisa, Madison, Nansemond, Page, Princess Anne, Pulaski, Rockbridge, Russell, Scott, Smyth, Tazewell, Warren, and Wythe cos., and the City of Norfolk (Bollman 1888b, Loomis 1944, Chamberlin 1947, Withrow 1988). West Virginia: Barbour, Cabell, Doddridge, Grant, Greenbrier, Hancock, Hardy, Marion, Marshall, Mason, Mercer, Monongalia, Monroe, Morgan, Nicholas, Ohio, Pendleton, Pleasants, Pocahontas, Preston, Raleigh, Randolph, Taylor, Tucker, and Webster cos. (Loomis 1944, Withrow 1988). Wisconsin: Clark, Crawford, Dane, Door, Fond du Lac, Marquette, Ozaukee, Racine, Washington, and Waukesha cos. (Withrow 1988, Watermolen 1995 b, Snyder and Draney 2008). New Records. CANADA: Ontario: Halton Co., Milton, Rattlesnake Pt., 2MM, F, 1 November 1921, JL Oughton (ROME). Ottawa-Carleton Co., 9.6 km (6 mi) W Richmond, 3MM, F, 6 May 1971, JEH Martin (CNC). York Co., Toronto, Rouge R., Kingston Rd., M, F, 2 June 1939, JL Oughton (ROME). Québec: Drummond cd, Drummondville, 2MM, 2FF, 12 October 1975, L. LeSage (NCSM). Hull cd, Ironside, M, 3FF, LM Stöhr (MHNG). Maskinongé cd, Sainte-Angèle, M, 10 October 1980, L. LeSage (NCSM). Pontiac cd, Shawville, M, 20 August 1972, Bowen (CNC). Vaudreuil cd, Rigaud, 22 May 1981, L. LeSage (CNC). USA: Alabama: Lowndes Co., 13. km (8.4 mi) NE Ft. Deposit, M, 19 April 1983, RM Shelley (NCSM). Macon Co., Tuskegee, M, 3 February 1980, AK Johnson (TMM). First Published Records. Connecticut: Fairfield Co., Norwalk, M, 21 July 1943, W. Ivie (USNM); and Redding Ridge, 30 March 1964, CL Remington (PMNH). Hartford Co., Stratton Brook and Penwood St. Pks. 29 October 1961, CL and EE Remington (PMNH). Litchfield Co., White Memorial, 2MM, 2FF, NM Mbumba (UCMS). New Haven Co., New Haven, 27 July 1868 (PMNH) and 16 September 1974, DC Southworth (PMNH); Oxford, M, F, 17 April 1871, O. Harger (PMNH); Bethany, 9 October 1960 and 7 May 1962, CL Remington (PMNH); North Haven, March 1961, EE Remington (PMNH); Woodbridge, 4 May 1961 (PMNH); West Rock, M, F, 25 September 1963, B. Vogel (PMNH); and Seymour, M, 7 October 1973, JR Lynch (PMNH). Tolland Co., Mansfield, 9 May 1961, JM Skinner (UCMS). First Published Records . Delaware: New Castle Co., 4.8 km (3 mi) E Ashland, along DE hwy 82, M, 21 April 1998, RM Shelley (NCSM); and Newark, University of Delaware campus, F, 21 April 1998, RM Shelley, CR Bartlett (NCSM). New State Record . District of Columbia: 2MM, 2FF, 28 February 1967, TJ Spilman (USNM). Glen Sligo, M, 2FF, April 1898 (USNM). New Record. Florida: Bay Co., Econfina Cr. floodplain at SR 388, M, 17 February 1994, R. Franz (NCSM). Gadsden Co., boat landing on Apalachicola R. S of I-10, 4MM, 2FF, 17 April 1997, RM Shelley (NCSM). Jackson Co., Florida Caverns St. Pk., M, 2 April 1964, AA Weaver (NCSM) and M, 15 June 1999, RM Shelley (NCSM). Illinois: Coles Co., M, 26 October 1977, RC Funk (INHS). Lake Co., Zion, Beach St. Pk., M, 2 November 1961, Evers, Stannard (INHS). Pope Co., Eddyville, M, F, 2 May 1969 (INHS). Indiana: Crawford Co., 6.4 km (4 mi) SW English, Hemlock Cliffs, 2MM, F, 6 June 2005, RM Shelley, JJ Lewis (NCSM). Jennings Co., 2MM, 26 April 1976, J. Rosenbalm (ULKY). Lake Co., Gary, M, 3 March 1900 (USNM). Monroe Co., Bloomington, M, 4FF, 1902, HW Brölemann (MNHN). Parke Co., Turkey Run St. Pk., M, F, 28 April 1945 (USNM). Union Co., Liberty, M, 2FF, October 1896, JN Rose (USNM). Iowa: Hancock Co., Forrest City, Pilot Knob, M, 3 June 1960, HW Levi (MCZ). Kansas: Barber Co., Barber Wildlife area nr. Medicine Lodge, juv., 4 May 2005, CT McAllister (NCSM). Kentucky: Allen Co., junction Reels Rd. and co. rd. 482, M, F, 25 September 2004, RM Shelley (NCSM); and Long Cr. at co. rd. 100, M, 25 September 2004, RM Shelley (NCSM). Jefferson Co., Louisville, M, 13 September 1975, LM Nash (ULKY). Leslie Co., 6.4 km (4 mi) SSW Hyden, KY hwy. 406 at Bowen Cr., M, 10 June 2001, RM Shelley (NCSM). Marshall Co., Kentucky Lake St. Pk., 2MM, 2FF, 13 Octo
Weekly Memo (Vol. 1, No. 23, October 29, 1979)
A newsletter with University of Lethbridge campus news.UNIVERSITY^ OF ,LETH3RIDGF
* The Weekly Nemo *
PUBLISHED AT THE UNIVERSITY OF LETHBRIDGE FOR INTERNAL COMMUNICATION
Vol. 1 - No., 25
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Monday, October 29, 1979 -
DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY SEMINAR: OCTOBER 29
TIME: 12:00 NOON
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speaker: DR. BRENDA MILNER
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TOPIC: NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF COGNITIVE PROCESSES
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PLACE: 50 CARLETON ROAD WEST LETHBRIDGE
IF YOU HAVE CRAFTS TO SELL CALL 327-9953.-3-
COMING EVENTS CONTINUED.............................
FRIENDLY FILM SOCIETY PRESENTS: NOVEMBER 4 TIME: 7:30 P.M.
PLACE: E:690
featuring: seven percent solution SHERLOCK HOLMES MEETS SIGMUND FREUD WHO HELPS HIM WITH HIS COCAINE HABIT. NEED WE SAY MORE?
ADMISSION: 2.00
MASS SCHEDULE UNIVERSITY OF LETHBRIDGE: NOVEMBER A
SUNDAY: 10:30 A.M. ROOM C-810 (NATIVE STUDIES LOUNGE)
WEDNESDAY
AND
THURSDAY 12.00 P.M. ROOM D-630
FR. CLARE WATRIN, CATHOLIC CHAPLAIN
Monday,.. IteraER 5,. 1929 - . r
BIBLE STUDY PROGRAM: NOVEMBER 5
THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO JOIN FR. CLARE WATRIN, CATHOLIC CHAPLAIN IN A FFVE-WEEK INTRODUCTORY SCRIPTURE STUDY PROGRAM. INCLUDED IN THE PROGRAM WILL BE VARIOUS SLIDE PRESENTATIONS OF PLACES MENTIONED IN SCRIPTURE. THE PROGRAM BEGIN MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, AT 7:30 P.M., AND WILL RUN FOR THE NEXT FOUR MONDAY NIGHTS. IT WILL BE HELD IN ROOM- E-620, AND IS OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS AND STAFF.
CANADIAN INSTITUTE OF UKRAINIAN STUDIES SEMINAR: NOVEMBER 5
TIME: 7:30 P.M.
PLACE: C-674
SPEAKER: DR. ANDRIJ HORNJATKEVYC
TOPIC: CONTEMPORY UKRAINIAN CULTURE
IN COOPERATION WITH CONTINUING EDUCATION, UNIVERSITY OF LETHBRIDGE.
FIRST MONDAY OF THE MONTH: NOVEMBER 5
TIME:
12.00 NOON
place:
C-674
SPEAKER:
J. WOODS, DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY
TOPIC:
INTRIGUING CONUNDRUMS AND INFURIATING PARADOXES IN NON- CLASSICAL LOGIC
EVERYONE
WELCOME.’-INCOMING
EVENTS CONTINUED...............................
Tuesday, November 6, 1979 -
time:
7:30 P.M.
PLACE:
LETHBRIDGE PUBLIC LIBRARY
speaker:
DR. LOTTA HITSCHMANOVA
UNITARIAN SERVICE COMMITTEE (USC) EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
EVERYONE
WELCOME’
■/ednesdaYa November 7., 1979 -
THE HUMANITIES: THE NATURE AND STATE OF THE DISCIPLINES: NOVEMBER 7 TIME: 12 NOON
PLACE: ROOM D-638
SPEAKERS: HISTORY— J. PENTON AND J. TAGG
PHILOSOPHY COLLQUIUM: NOVEMBER 7
TIME:
4:u0 P.M. - 6:00 P.M.
place:
ROOM C-589 . f
speaker:
PROFESSOR GRAHAM MCFEE
EAST SUSSEX COLLEGE OF HIGHER EDUCATION
AUTHOR OF "MUCH OF JACKSON POLLOCK IS VIVID WALLPAPER"
topic:
THE HISTORICAL NATURE OF ART
EVERYONE
WELCOME!
Thursday, November 8, 1979 -
ENGLISH SEMINAR SERIES SPONSORED BY THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT PRESENTS: NOVEMBER 8
SPEAKER:
CHERYL CALVER
TOPIC:
SYMMETRY, SEDUCTION, AND SURVIVAL: SPENCER'S SECRET DESIGN FOR THE BOWER OF BLISS
time:
12:15 P.M.
place:
BOARD ROOM, A-790
EVERYONE
WELCOME!
EDUCATION SEMINAR: NOVEMBER 8
TOPIC: TEACHING IN A HUTTERITE SCHOOL
SPEAKER: DAVE WILSON (SENIOR EDUCATION STUDENT AT U OF L)
TIME: 12:00 NOON
PLACE: ROOM B-740
DAVE WILSON HAS TAUGHT FOR 3 YEARS IN HUTTERITE COLONIES.
FREE LUNCH WILL AGAIN BE SERVED AND WE PROMISE ADDITIONAL FOOD AND DRINK.-5-
RECREATION SERVICES:
UPCOMING EVENTS
INTRAMURALS
- MEN’S TRIPLES VOLLEYBALL - STARTS OCTOBER 25
- SUPER NOVICE COED BASKETBALL-
- REGISTRATION DEADLINE - EXTENDED
- STARTS VERY SOON
(ENCOURAGE STAFF PARTICIPATION; NO EXPERIENCED COMPETITORS ARE ALLOWED) '
-EMPHASIS IS ON THE FUN ASPECT
SPECIAL EVENTS
BADMINTON -
- DEADLINE ON DAY PRIOR TO TOURNAMENT
- TOURNAMENT ON NOVEMBER 3
(BADMINTON IS VERY POPULAR WITH THE STAFF AND EMPLOYEES OF THE U OF L
AN ALL ROUND INCREASE IN THE NUMBER OF PEOPLE WOULD BE NICE)
- THREE ON THREE BASKETBALL
- DEADLINE NOVEMBER 7
- EVENT IS ON NOVEMBER 10
(1 VARSITY EXPERIENCED PLAYER PER TEAM, HEIGHT LIMIT 18’ 3"- VERY F
COMPETITIVE IN PAST YEARS)
PERRY MIRKOVICH - INTRAMURALS 329 -2689
MIKE FALKENBERG - SPECIAL EVENTS 329- 2689
-PLANNING FOR NEXT SEMESTER, CALL THEM AND GIVE YOUR IDEAS.
- MALE AND FEMALE EMPLOYEE FITNESS PROGRAMS ARE UNDER WAY. ALL STAFF ARE
ENCOURAGED TO PARTICIPATE:
MEN MEET AT 12:15 P.M., SMALL GYM, TUESDAY AND THURSDAY
JAMIE PATTERSON, INSTRUCTOR
LADIES MEET AT 12:15 P.M., SMALL GYM MONDAY AND WEDNESDAY
VALERIE MACLEAN, INSTRUCTOR
JOIN IN THE FUN OF FITNESS!
OUTDOOR RECREATION: BRIAN ROTH
GIVE BRIAN SOME IMPUT FOR TRIPS NEXT SEMESTER CALL HIM AT 329-2689
BETWEEN 10 AND 11 A.M. OR STOP BY P.E. 106 A AND CHAT.
RESIDENCE RECREATION: DAVE BLEMMINGS
CONTACT DAVE IN RESIDENCE FOR ALL THE ON GOING AND PLANNED ACTIVITIES.
_ HELP US PLAN FOR NEXT SEMESTER NOW. STOP IN OR CALL OUR OFFICE (P.E. 106A)
329-2689 BETWEEN 12 - 1 P.M., 3-6 P.M. AND TELL US YOUR IDEAS.
-6-
NOTICES COMTINUED
Eh St
(S e c o n d H a lf)
HAIN GYM SCHEDULE f a l l semester 197£
—
• 0
s: ►—«
• 1-
CL <
• • UJ
or
j 1
UJ
“ CM
r—< -W
FRIDAY
---------n
1 &
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in
rH
00
£
H
CO
-7-
NOTICES CONTINUED.....................
WEEKLY MEMO NOTICE
THE WEEKLY MEMO WILL BE OUT ON MONDAY AFTERNOON. EVENTS AND NOTICES
SHOULD BE PRESENTED TO THE GENERAL OFFICE ROOM B-760 NO LATER THAN :30 P.M.
WEDNESDAY PRECEDING EACH PUBLICATION. COPIES OF THE ONCE WEEKLY WILL BE AVAILABLE
FROM THE GENERAL OFFICE AND VARIOUS AREAS ON THE SIXTH FLOOR.
EVENTS MAY BE PUBLISHED IN THE ONCE WEEKLY IF THEY MEET AT LEAST ONE
OF THE FOLLOWING CRITERIA:
1. THE EVENT IS TO BE HELD ON CAMPUS.
2. THE EVENT, IF IT IS TO BE HELD OFF-CAMPUS, IS SPONSORED
BY OR HELD UNDER THE AUSPICES OF A RECONI ZED CAMPUS ORGANIZATION.
3. THE EVENT, IF IT IS HELD OFF-CAMPUS AND IS NOT RECONI ZED
DIRECTLY INVOLVES A REGISTERED STUDENT, FACULTY OR^TAFF
AS ITS PARTICIPANT.
NOTICES WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED UNLESS THEY ARE WRITTEN AND SIGNED.
CITY OF LETHBRIDGE BUS SCHEDULE:
WEST LETHBRIDGE &
UNIVERSITY OF LETHBRIDGE
Columbia Blvd - Lalayana Blvd — Columbia Blvd
Laval Blvd — McGill Blvd - Unlvarelty
WEST LETHBRIDGE &
UNIVERSITY OF LETHBRIDGE
Sundays Only
LEAVES
4 AVE & 6 ST SO
LEA VES
LAVAL & McGlLL BLVD
LEA VES
I EAVES 4 AVE SO UNIVERSITY
fl 0 SI SO
• 7 (X) a m 12 20 p
*7 20 12 40
•7 40 1 00
0 00 1 20
-fl 20 1 40
*8 40 2 00
•8 00 2 20
*8 20 2 40
8 40 3 00
10 00 3 20
10 20 3 40
10 40 4 00
11 00 4 20
11 20 4 40
11 40 5 00
12 00 noon 5 20
LEAVES McMASTER BLVD LEAVES UNIVERSITY
IL McQILL BLVD
5 40 p • 7 2fl a m 12 40 pm 8 00 p m ■7 10 am 12.50 p m fl 10
0 00 •7 45 1 00 fl 20 ■7 30 1 10 0:30
fl 20 •fl 05 1 20 fl 40 •7 50 1:30 0:50
e 40 •fl 25 1 40 7 00 •fl 10 160 7 10-
7 00 r •fl 45 200 7 20 £ •0.30 2.10 7:30 jf
7 20 4 •8 05 2:20 7 40 s •fl 50 2 30 7 50- o
7 40 ■8 25 2 40 BOO c •8.10 2 50 8.10 £
8 00 £ •8 46 3 00 fl 20 - u.
**
•8:30 3:10 0.30— 4
8 20
■o 10 00 3 20 8 40 10:10 3:30 0 50
fl 40- 10 20 3 40 8.00- p3
10:30 3:50 8:10— 5
800 2 10:40 4:00 8 20 r 10:50 4:10 8:30 1-
8 20- 11:00 4 20 8.40- 11:10 4:30 9:50—
8 40 11:20 4 40 10:00 11:30 4:50 10:10
10 20 1140 5:00 10:40 11:50 5.10 10.50
Last Bus 12:00 noon 5:20 Last Bus 12:10pm 5:30 Laat Bus
12:20 pm 5 40 12:30 5:50
•GOES TO UNIVERSITY BEFORE ARRIVING AT WEST LETHBRIDGE
6 00 P M TRIP WILL NOT OPERATE ON SATURDAY
NO BUS SERVICE ON STATUTORY HOLIDAY8
SUNDAYS: SEE SUNDAY SCHEDULE
8:30 am
9:30
10:30
11:30
12:30 pm
1:30
2:30
3:30
4:30
5:30
6:30
7:30
8:30
9:30
10:30
Last Bus
845 am
9:45
10 45
11 45
12:45 p m
1:45
2:45
3:45
4:45
5:45
6:45
7:45
8:45
9:45
10:45
Last Bus
8 50 a m
9 50
10 50
11:50
12 50 p m
1:50
2.50
3 50
4:50
5:50
6.50
7:50
8 50
9 50
10:50
Last Bus
NO BUS SERVICE ON STATUTORY HOLIDAYS
GENERAL OFFICE NOTICE:
ATTENTION : FACULTY AND STAFF
PLEASE RETURN ALL LARGE BROWN INTER- DEPARTMENT MAIL ENVELOPES NOT IN
USE TO THE GENERAL OFFICE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE.
-8-
NOTICES CONTINUED.............................
The Chaplains Council Schedule
19 79
Tli<- University of Lethbridge
4-5
T i ,ll<
Munday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
9- U
R. Monroe
lli-ll
11-12
C.
K.
E.
Watrin
Bailie
Kelbert
12-1
C.
K.
A.
Watrin
Bailie
Roth
1-2
C.
B.
H.
A.
Watrin
Merrifield
King.
Roth
2-3
C.
M.
B.
T.
Watrin
Strople
Calderwood
Seim
3-4
C.
M.
B.
Watrin
Strople
Calderwood
PARENTS IN CRISIS MEETS TUESDAY EVENINGS AT THE CENTRE FOR PERSONAL AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT # 205 8 STREET AND A AVENUE (USE 8 AVENUE SOUTH ENTRANCE). PARENTS EXPERIENCING DIFFICULTIES COPING WITH THEIR CHILDERN ARE WELCOME. CALL 327-5724 FOR INFORMATION.
SEVERAL GROUPS OF FOREIGN STUDENTS RENTING UNFURNISHED ACCOMMODATION IN LETHBRIDGE NEED HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS- POTS, DISHES, DESKS, FURNITURE, WARM WINTER CLOTHING, ETC. IF YOU CAN SPARE HOUSEHOLD MATERIAL OF ANY VARIETY, PLEASE PHONE THE CUSO OFFICE AT 329-2260. THANK YOU.
INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP PRAYER MEETING
WEDNESDAY’S
TIME: 12 NOON
PLACE: ROOM C-720
EVERYONE WELCOME!-9-
NOTICES CONTINUED.....................
ANY STUDENT WHO NEEDS TO TAKE ENGLISH 1000, 1800, OR 1900 IN THE 1980 SPRING
SEMESTER (NEXT SEMESTER) PLEASE LEAVE YOUR NAME AND PARTICULARS AT THE REGISTRAR’S
OFFICE. THIS WILL ASSIST THE ENGLISH DEPARTMENT IN DETERMINING THE NUMBER OF
SECTIONS TO PROVIDE.
NATURAL SCIENCES AND ENGINEERING RESEARCH COUNCIL POSTGRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS:
INFORMATION ON NATURAL SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING RESEARCH COUNCIL POSTGRADUATE
SCHOLARSHIPS FOR 1980/81, IS AVAILABLE FROM THE CHAIRMEN OF THE NATURAL SCIENCE
DEPARTMENTS AND FROM THE OFFICE OF THE VICE-PRESIDENT (ACADEMIC). THE DEADLINE
FOR SUBMISSION OF APPLICATIONS, COMPLETE WITH ALL COVERING DOCUMENTATION, TO THE
VICE-PRESIDENT’S OFFICE, IS NOVEMBER 15, 1979. NO APPLICATIONS SUBMITTED AFTER
THIS DATE WILL BE CONSIDERED.
SPECIAL event:
BIOLOGICAL SEMINAR:
topic: reproductive biology of colonial ascidians
SPEAKER: DR. MICHAEL J. CAVEY
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ANIMAL BIOLOGY
UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY
date: THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1979
time:
place:
4:30 P.M.
THE UNIVERSITY OF LETHBRIDGE, ROOM C-674
EVERYONE WELCOME!
DIVISION OF CONTINUING EDUCATION REQUIRES A STUDENT TO CODE QUESTIONNAIRES FOR
COMPUTER DATA ENTRY. APPLY TO CONTINUING EDUCATION OFFICE B-884.
DAY CARE CENTRE REQUIRES SUBSTITUTE STAFF TO FILL IN WHEN REGULAR STAFF ARE ABSENT.
IF YOU HAVE HAD SOME EARLY TRAINING OR EXPERIENCE AND ARE INTERESTED. CONTACT
PAT NICOL 329-2336 AT THE DAY CARE CENTRE.
-10-
EMPLOYMENT CONTINUED........................
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES:
1. COOPERS S LYBRAND (CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS)
2. PEAT, MARWICK, MITCHELL £ CO. (CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS)
3. BZVsJK OF MONTREAL
THE ABOVE EMPLOYERS WILL BE ON CAMPUS IN LATE OCTOBER AND EARLY NOVEMBER. ANYONE
INTERESTED IN BEING INTERVIEWED SHOULD CONTACT SANDRA MILLIS, STUDENT SERVICES AS
SOON AS POSSIBLE.
TREASURY BRANCH (BANK) WILL BE ON CAMPUS NOVEMBER 15 TO CONDUCT INTERVIEWS WITH ANY
STUDENTS INTERESTED IN TRAINING FOR MANAGEMENT POSITIONS WITHIN THEIR ORGANIZATION.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT SANDRA MILLIS, STUDENT SERVICES.
FOUND PROPERTY:
# 56 1 SCRIBBLER - I.D. "MONROIx"
# 57 1 PKG FILM
# 58 1 "THERMOS" BOTTLE
# 59 1 TEXT "INTRODUCTION TO PROBABILITY AND STATISTICS"
FOUND: IN ROOM D-642 A FOUNTAIN PEN. CONTACT PSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT SECRETARY.
LOST PROPERTY:
#1018 1 "SHEAFFER" FOUNTAIN PEN
#1019 1 "SHEAFFER" BALL POINT PEN
#1020 1 "COFFEE MUG" WHITE, BEARS INITIAL "N" IN BLACK
#1022 1 BROWN LEATHER WALLET I.D. "NEIL LIGHTFOOT"
#1023 1 "FRENCH" TEXT BOOK
#1025 (A) 1 TABLEKNIFE
(B) 1 TABLE FORK
(C) 1 BOWL, CLEAR PLASTIC
#1026 (A) 1 "STUDENT CARD" I.D. APRIL LOO
(B) 1 "SOCIAL INSURANCE CARD" I.D. APRIL LO
