453 research outputs found

    Lyle Nelson Folder

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    33 pages of family history documents containing and related to Lyle Nelson - including: Statesman and Star News accounts and photos of Lyle Nelson, biathlon competitor from McCall; National Meets; Olympics; Author; Speaker; NBC ancho

    Katie Letcher Lyle, 3rd Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    While Katie Letcher Lyle is best known as the author of acclaimed novels for young people— I Will Go Barefoot All Summer For You, Fair Day, and Another Step Begun, — she has also published poems and nonfiction. She has written articles on popular music, the language arts, and food, in addition to producing four half-hour television scripts for the series Footsteps, now being aired nationally on PBS. She teaches at Southern Seminary and has appeared at many schools and conferences. A forthcoming novel, Scott\u27s Marathon, is scheduled for October publication

    UHS Class Reunion - Class of 1947

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    Front row (left to right): Ovel Oaks, Floyd Needles, Theron Davis, Howard Richardson, Sam Snyder, John Davis, Glade Sowards, Dan Workman and Bill Workman; 2nd row: Jay Anderson, Delores Lopez, Lorraine Frazier, Eva York, Kathleen Ahrnsbrak, Clarene Crawford, Rachel Ashworth, Patricia Stewart, Marva Lent, Marita Batty, and Norine Merrell; 3rd row: Rex Batty, Lyle McKeachnie, Wendell Collier, Fern Lambert, Joyce Loutensock, Helen Broadaway, Janet Clark, Vivian McCarrel, Deon Price, Audrey Udall, Nila Siddoway, Eula Price, Keith Caldwell, Clayton Curtis, W.R. Siddoway and Max Stewart; Back row: Lyle Martinsen, B.J.McCarrel, Irvin Haws, Bill Rasmussen, Harold Bodily, Jesse York, Sam Haslem, Burtron Johnson, Kenn Perry and Sterling Colton

    First Quorum of Deacons Certificate

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    This Certificate is a Standard Quorum Award to First Quorum of Deaons of the Glines Ward of the Uintah Stake. The membership included Lyle McKeachnie, Holt Wardle, Clayton Curtis, Billie Workman, Clyde Burns, Ronald Deans, Dale Galley, Arzy Luck, Garry Winward, Kay Mecham, Harold Cloward, Hurum Workman, Gordon Perry, Wayne Batty, Thomas Samuels, and Terry Fletcher

    Profile - Lyle Dick CHA Vice-President

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    Lyle Dick is the author of 90 publications on topics in Canadian and American history, historiography, and Arctic history, including the book Muskox Land: Ellesmere Island in the Age of Contact(University of Calgary Press, 2001), which was awarded the Harold Adams Innis Prize for Canada’s best-English-language book in the social sciences in 2003, and Farmers “Making Good”(Revised edition, University of Calgary Press, 2008), co-awarded the Canadian Historical Association’s Clio Prize in 1990 for the best book on the history of the prairie provinces

    Uintah High School FFA Club

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    Uintah High School Future Farmers of America (FFA) Club members from left, front row, Don Erickson, Dick Hullinger, Glade Anderson, Nolan McKay, Ferron Bingham, unidentified and unidentified. Second row, unidentified, unidentified, Myles McCoy, Thomas Pearson, unidentified, unidentified, Ted Workman, Wayne Batty, and Max Hunting. Third row, Lorin Hacking, Lyle Mckeachnie, Mark Allen, Jack Pace, Chuck Preece, Berle Bell, unidentified and Bill McKee. Back row, Weldon Van Tassel, unidentified, unidentified, Markel Caldwell, unidentified, Sterling Colton, Bill Workman and Clayton Curtis

    Uintah High School FFA Club

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    Members of the FFA Club at Uintah High School are pictured from left, Front row, unidentified, unidentified, David Roberts, Grant Christensen, Berle Bell, Gratten Hall, Melvin Freestone, Don Erickson and unidentified. Second row, unidentified, unidentified, Loren Hacking, Sam Snyder, Lyle McKeachnie, Wilson Kurtz, Albert Lopez, Mr. Doyle Landon, unidentified, Sterling Colton, William Siddoway, Mac Workman, Valda Massey, unidentified and Keith Caldwell. Third row, Max Hunting, next four unidentified, Richard Peterson, Dean Chew, Kayle Sundquist, Ervin Wilkins, Bill McKee, Markel Caldwell, unidentified, Maurice Warby, unidentified, and Clayton Curtis. Back row, unidentified, unidentified, Thad Stringham, unidentified, unidentified, Marvin Jones, next four unidentified, Floyd Jackson, unidentified, Bill Workman

    Stasimopus finni Brandt & Sole & Lyle 2023, sp. nov.

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    Stasimopus finni sp. nov. (Figures 5B, 11B, 13A, 14, 15) Type material: Holotype Ô SOUTH AFRICA: Eastern Cape Province, Somerset East (-32.9386, 25.6612), 14.v.2018, S. Brandt, C. Sole, E. Engelbrecht and E. Brand, (NCA 2019/605). Etymology: The specific epithet is patronym in honour of Finn Robert Pirk the son of the third author, who loves all creepy crawlies. Diagnosis: The males of S. finni sp. nov. are distinguishable from other members of the genus occurring in the Karoo based on the following combination of characters. It is differentiated from S. astutus, S. erythrognathus, S. malesociatus sp. nov., S. patersonae, S. steynsbergensis, S. karooensis sp. nov. and S. mandelai based on the pedipalp not reaching the tarsus of leg I. Distinguished from S. palpiger as the pedipalp is longer than leg I, which S. finni sp. nov. is not. The species has denser cheliceral denticles (>11) than S. schrieneri (<5), S. ignis sp. nov. (<5) and S. maraisi (<10). Stasimopus finni sp. nov. is in general more spinose on the legs than S. dylani sp. nov. (Tibia of leg I and IV). Description: Based on the holotype Ô (NCA 2019/605). Remarks: Ô: The left AME is reduced in size, making some eye measurements unreliable. &female;: Known only from the type male. General: Ô: (Fig 5B) Medium bodied spider, 10.84 total length. Carapace: Ô: Carapace length 4.76; width 4.05. Deep red-brown colouration, thoracic region with rugose texture. Fovea procurved, 0.81 in length. Ocelli: Ô: (Fig 11B) AME diameter 0.14, PME diameter 0.19, MOQ anterior width 1.22 (may not be accurate due to deformity), MOQ posterior width 1.71; AME-AME 0.31 (may not be accurate due to deformity)., AME-ALE 0.10, ALE-ALE 0.65, PME-PME 0.79, PME-PLE 0.16, PLE-PLE 1.14. AER procurved, PER recurved. Chelicerae: Ô: (Fig 13A) Two teeth rows present, 4 teeth proventral row, 4 in retroventral row; 11–13 cuspules between rows. Sternum, labium and maxillae: Ô: (Fig 14C) Sternum length 2.66; sternum width 2.19. Sternum shape has distinct impressions of where the coxa are situated. Sigilla in the shape of a fused arrow, distal end fused, proximal end 0.69 apart; cuspules on labium absent; maxilla absent. Abdomen: Ô: (Fig 5B) Abdomen length 6.08; width 4.30. Pale beige colouration with dark grey banding, smaller band near carapace, followed by broader and wider band, then a narrower band, lastly two shorter bands next to one another. Pedipalps: Ô: (Fig 14A, B) Total length 16.03; Segment lengths 1.57, 5.42, 4.15, -, 4.88. Spines absent. Bulb oval, embolus elongated, tapering retrolaterally into sharp point. Legs: Ô: Length order: I, IV, II, III. I Total length 17.40; Segment lengths 5.54, 2.36, 4.22, 3.93, 1.35; Spination: spines absent on femur, with sparse setae. Patella v - 2–3 spines distally. Tibia (Fig 14D) v - 16–18 large spines extend pl & rl, denser distally. Metatarsus (Fig 14D) v - 15–16 large spines extend pl & rl. Tarsus (Fig 14D) pl & rl - 1–2 small spines, v - scopulate. II Total length 15.53; Segment lengths 4.77, 2.23, 3.63, 3.57, 1.33; Spination: spines absent on femur, with sparse setae. Patella v - 2–3 spines distally. Tibia v - 16 large spines extend pl & rl, denser distally. Metatarsus v - 14–16 large spines, 1 distinctly large spine distally on pl and rl aspects. Tarsus pl & rl - 2–3 small spines, v - scopulate. III Total length 11.75; Segment lengths 3.01, 1.54, 1.38, 3.68, 2.14; Spination: spines absent on femur, with sparse setae. Patella do - 11 small spines. Tibia pl - 1 spine, almost v, do - 2 unorganised rows of red spinules (11 pl / do; 8–9 rl / do). Metatarsus do - 8 spines in two 2, v (Fig 14E)—18 spines, 3 are large and distal. Tarsus v (Fig 14E)—7 small spines, extend pl & rl, dense setae covering spines. IV Total length 17.38; Segment lengths 4.27, 2.31, 3.66, 4.85, 2.29; Spination: spines absent on femur, with sparse setae. Patella do - short dense red spines proximally, less dense distally; interspersed with fine black setae. Tibia pl / v - 2–3 small spines. Metatarsus pl - 8 spines, v (Fig 14F)—I5 spines (4 large spines distally), spines extend pl. Tarsus (Fig 14F) pl - 11–14 spines, extend v, v - 7 small spines. Distribution and environment notes: The species is found in the localities indicated in Figure 15. The species is only known from the type locality near Somerset East in the Eastern Cape province. The location was a flat between small hills. The vegetation was dominated by low shrubs and aloe plants. The soil was very hard, chalky and pale. The specimen was found in a short burrow (Approx. 10cm deep). FIGURE 15. Map of the locality where the Stasimopus finni sp. nov. specimen was collected. Numbers match the site numbers in Figure 1. Map created in QGIS version 3.4.8-Madeira (2019), available at: http://qgis.osgeo.org.Published as part of Brandt, Shannon, Sole, Catherine & Lyle, Robin, 2023, An integrative taxonomy of the genus Stasimopus Simon 1892 (Araneae: Mygalomorphae) of the Karoo with the description of nine new species and a Stasimopus maraisi Hewitt 1914 male, pp. 1-60 in Zootaxa 5341 (1) on pages 24-27, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5341.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/832374

    UHS Sophomore Class 1945

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    These photographs were taken for the 1944-1945 edition of the Uintah High School Yearbook. They are located on page 18. The portraits on this page are of members of the sophomore class. Top row, from left to right: Burtron Johnson, Marie Lyon, Valda Massey, Betty McKnight, Keith Hatch, and Erma Nickell. Second row down, from left to right: Joye McKeachnie, Earl Merrell, Ruth Pope, Bryce Mackay, Nila Perry, and Jack Haws. Third row down, from left to right: Karl Merkley, Elva Timothy, Gratton Hall, Eva Reynolds, Sam Snyder, and Josie May Rownan. Fourth row down, from left to right: Kathyleen Merkley, Richard Peterson, Alice Walker, Lyle McKeachnie, Janet Ruppe, and Orvil Merrell. Fifth row down, from left to right: Glen Morrison, Marva Walker, Arvel Oaks, Joyce Sundquist, Richard James, and Lorraine Slaugh. Sixth row down, from left to right: Nola Mae Weeks, Ervin Wilkins, Dorothy Ann Witbeck, Sam Haslem, Norine White, and Irvin Haws. Seventh row down, from left to right: Kenneth Perry, Beulah Redding, Glade Sowards, Helen Allen, Max Stewart, and DeWayne Rhodes. Eighth row down, from left to right: Howard Richardson, Lynn Richardson, Marvel Roper, William Siddoway, Ernest Weeks, and George Perry. Bottom row, from left to right: Bill Workman, Dan Workman, Marita Williams, Mac Workman, Lyle Martinsen, and Willard Rasmussen
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