177,094 research outputs found
P.2.b.009 Regulation of the astrocytic proteins NDRG2 and GFAP in the rat hippocampus by chronic social stress: no reversal by citalopram
Yager, Ward Callis
Ward Callis Yager*, LL.B.
Warsaw, Kentucky
Henry Clay Law Society; Union Literary Society; Democratic Club; Royal Order F. L. E.; Y. M. C. A.
Some men are born great, while others achieve greatness. During the year of 1911 the said Ward Collins Yeager aboarded the train at Warsaw. Ky., and was railroaded to the Queen City of the Blue Grass, for the purpose of entering the College of Law, where he could grow into a stateman and legal adviser, which according to the facts and circumstances, concerning his conduct, pleasurably, magnanimously and wilfully done. Since his arrival here he has made himself famous by his political jokes and witicisms. These marks of natural genius do not surpass those of his acquisition and we verily believe that he is destined to be a leader of mankind.
-The Kentuckian, 1914-----------------------------------
Ward Callis Yager (July 2, 1891 - February 24, 1967) was born in Oldham County, Kentucky to Junius Brutus Yager and Elizabeth Alma Blackerby. After receiving his LL.B. in 1914, Yager practiced law in Lexington in the office of W. C. G. Hobbs for 18 months. He then worked for the city of Lexington as the mayor\u27s secretary. Additionally, Yager worked as a special judge in various Fayette County courts. In 1919, Yager returned to Warsaw, Kentucky to practice law. He was then appointed Gallatin county attorney in 1920. Yager would later serve as Gallatin Circuit Judge for 27 years. Yager married Ruth M. Graham.
*Sometimes spelled \u27Yeager\u27. \u27Yager\u27 has been chosen as it is the name on Mr. Yager\u27s tombstone.https://uknowledge.uky.edu/klapp_1914/1029/thumbnail.jp
George Albert Smith correspondence, October and November 1910
Miscellaneous correspondence and papers of George A. Smith from October and November of 1910. Includes a letter from C. E. Dinwoodey at Idaho Falls, Idaho; a letter from Edward J. Wood of Cardston, Alberta, while visiting in Salt Lake City; and a letter from Charles A. Callis of the Southern States Mission at Chattanooga, Tennesse
George Albert Smith correspondence, December 1908
Miscellaneous correspondence and papers of George A. Smith from December of 1908. Includes a letter from Charles A. Callis of the Southern States Mission at Chattanooga, Tennessee, to the LDS First Presidency; copies of newspaper articles about George\u27s visit to Chattanooga; a letter from Samuel O. Bennion at the headquarters of the Central States Mission at Independence, Missouri; and a letter from Charles A. Callis of the Southern States Mission at Chattanooga, Tennesse
Queering Coloniality, Citizenship, and Sexual Identity
Please click the links below to view more information about each presentation.
“Queering the American Dream”
Emily N. Scott-Cruz, Salem College
“The Coloniality of Race and Gender and the Lives of Contemporary Trans Women”
Heather Stewart, University of Louisville
“Foucauldian Theory, Sexual Identity, and Self-Speciation”
April Callis, Northern Kentucky University
“Substance Abuse Advocacy as Resistance: The Gay Shame Movement and LGBT Substance Abuse Treatment”
Tyler C. Schrichte, East Tennessee State Universit
Richard Keddington, Ethel Baker Callis and Albert Eccles, production photograph for Emmet Lavery\u27s "The Magnificent Yankee" performed at Kingsbury Hall, University of Utah, January 7-10, 1948
Black and white production photograph of Richard Keddington, Ethel Baker Callis, and Albert Eccles, in a scene from Emmet Lavery\u27s "The Magnificent Yankee," performed at Kingsbury Hall, University of Utah. January 7-10, 1948
Richard Keddington and Ethel Baker Callis, production photograph for Emmet Lavery\u27s "The Magnificent Yankee" performed at Kingsbury Hall, University of Utah, January 7-10, 1948
Black and white production photograph of Richard Keddington and Ethel Baker Callis, in a scene from Emmet Lavery\u27s "The Magnificent Yankee," performed at Kingsbury Hall, University of Utah. January 7-10, 1948
Ethel Baker Callis and Deone Robinson, scene from Patterson Greene\u27s "Papa is All" performed at Kingsbury Hall, University of Utah, October 19-21, 1944
Color slide photograph of Ethel Baker Callis and Deone Robinson, in a scene from Patterson Greene\u27s "Papa is All," performed at Kingsbury Hall, University of Utah, October 19-21, 1944
Lilloiconcha lopezi Araya & Aliaga, 2015, new species
Lilloiconcha lopezi new species Figs. 1 A– 1 E. Diagnosis. Shell small, trochoid, slightly wider than high, with elevated spire; nearly five whorls, colored in bands of translucent caramel brown and white. Protoconch with 1.5 whorls, smooth. Teleoconch with about one hundred prosocline ribs (about 23 on last whorl), interspersed with many fine riblets; aperture circular, umbilicus ample and well developed. Description. Shell small (measuring up to 3.8 mm in width), trochoid, spire slightly elevated, shell height about 0.4 of shell width; with five and a half to six convex whorls. Protoconch clearly differentiated from teleoconch; of about one and a half whorls; almost smooth, sculptured only with very faint spiral threads, most noticeable near the sutures. Teleoconch of about four and a half whorls, sculptured with 96 to 104 prosocline coarse axial ribs, 21–24 of them on last whorl, with interspaces filled by about 15 to 21 slightly raised riblets; very faint irregular nodulae at their intersection with vestigial spiral threads, noticeable especially towards the sutures; suture deep and well-marked; aperture 0.4 of shell height, oval to almost circular; lip simple, callus a mere glaze; umbilicus very ample, deep, of about 0.3–0.4 of shell width; periostracum thin, projecting on the most prominent axial ribs; shell colored with alternating axial bands of translucent caramel brown and white. Animal unknown. Type material. Holotype: SBNHM 456358, paratypes: SBNHM 452239 (3 specimens), MPCCL 0 1572015 (2 specimens). All the material collected at the type locality by J. F. Araya & C. López, 0 3 th February 2014. Type locality. Los Molles (32 º 14 ’ S; 71 º 31 ’ W, 31 m), Commune of La Ligua, Region of Valparaíso, central Chile. Distribution and habitat. Only known from the type locality; the shells were found buried in humus and underneath stones, large boulders and rotten leaves. Etymology. Named in honor of our friend Christian López (Santiago, Chile). Remarks. The relationship of the new species with presumptive congeneric species from elsewhere in South America is still unknown; unfortunately all of the material consists only of empty shells and the diagnostic aspects of the anatomy, especially that of the penis, epiphallus and marginal radular teeth, are unknown. Hausdorf (2005) noted that although the protoconch of species in the genus appear to be smooth, it has spiral microsculpture when viewed in detail. This characteristic is apparent in the detail of the unworn sections of Fig. 1 E for the new species. Lilloiconcha lopezi is one of the largest species within the genus Lilloiconcha Thiele, 1927; among the congeneric species, only the Brazilian Lilloiconcha superba (Weyrauch, 1965) can be compared with the new species in size or morphometry; however it differs from Lilloiconcha lopezi in having a more elongated shell, with more whorls, less axial ribs (70 in L. superba and about a hundred in the new species) and a much smaller umbilicus (Miquel et al. 2007). Lilloiconcha tucumana Hylton Scott 1963, the type species of the genus, found in Tucumán, Horco Molle, northern Argentina, has a higher but comparatively smaller and much narrower shell, with more whorls (Fernández & Castellanos 1973). The new species differs from Lilloiconcha aysensis Miquel & Barker, 2009 —the only other Chilean species in the genus, described from Puerto Chacabuco, Aysén, about 1470 km from Los Molles—in having a much larger shell with a higher profile, sculptured with fewer and smaller axial ribs and in having an oval to almost circular aperture (which is subcircular and narrower in L. aysensis). This new species thus extends the distribution in Chile of the genus Lilloiconcha, previously known from the southern regions, to Los Molles, central Chile. Advancing our knowledge of the terrestrial malacological fauna in Chile is of high conservation importance given the ongoing increase in the introduction (or recognition) of nonindigenous or invasive land snails to the country, some of them a direct threat to micromollusks (Araya 2015). Further sampling in northern or central Chile will probably reveal more snail species to be discovered and described.Published as part of Araya, Juan Francisco & Aliaga, Juan Antonio, 2015, A new species of Lilloiconcha Weyrauch, 1965 (Pulmonata: Charopidae) from central Chile, pp. 295-297 in Zootaxa 4007 (2) on pages 295-296, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4007.2.13, http://zenodo.org/record/24385
Callis, Caius Marcellus, 1804-1863 (SC 3364)
Finding aid, scan and typescript (Click on Additional Files below) for Manuscripts Small Collection 3364. Letter, 8 July 1849, of C. M. Callis, Hopkinsville, Kentucky to his brother-in-law Thomas Garland, Charlottesville, Virginia. He refers to the affection of his young son for his late mother’s family, and expresses concern over the financial consequences of Virginia’s establishment of free schools. He also reports on the anticipated discussion of slavery at Kentucky’s upcoming constitutional convention and to Senator Henry Clay’s proposal for gradual emancipation, which is favored by a “respectable minority.” He expects the convention merely to prohibit the importation of slaves, but believes that a plan for the abolition of slavery must be adopted in the next ten years
- …
