4,614 research outputs found

    Excerpt from 2024 Keynote Address by Wade Rouse

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    An excerpt from the show-stopping keynote address by author Wade Rouse. He received a standing ovation and a request for a reprise/sing-along of a middle school performance of Delta Dawn

    Rouse, M.

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    Daily Reflections (Meditations) on the Scriptures from the Roman Catholic Lectionary.

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    "A prophet is not without honor except in his native place and among his own kin and in his own house."  Thus said Jesus in today's Gospel in response to the non-response of his neighbors to his teaching in the synagogue.  Their attitude blocked his ability to perform "mighty deeds."|I find this startling!  And it warrants some further thought. |Can it be that healing and "mighty deeds" gain their power by tapping into the relationship between the healer and the one needing to be healed—even when Jesus is the healer?|There are so many applications:  the aloof teacher vs. one with understanding; the ultra-efficient vs. the gracious health provider; the judge who dispenses justice with mercy vs. the letter of he law jurist.|We are in the second month of the Year of Mercy called forth by Pope Francis.  Perhaps our response requires a deeper look at our patterns, our attitudes, our evaluations of others with a particular notice of those close to us toward whom we harbor prejudgments or jealousy.|How sad it would be to discover later that we had blocked the movement of the Holy Spirit in our world today!|* A special thank you to Maryanne Rouse, who has retired from Creighton, and from many years of writing these Daily Reflections

    Rouse, Colvin Patterson

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    Colvin Patterson Rouse, L.L.B. Lexington, Kentucky Delta Sigma Pi, Phi Delta Phi, Editor-in-Chief - Kentucky Law Journal, President - Henry Clay Law Society -The Kentuckian, 1928-------------------------------- Colvin Patterson Rouse (July 28, 1903 - July 3, 1993) was born in Midway, Kentucky to Julius Ephraim Rouse and Cora Dell Conner. Rouse practiced law in Versailles, Kentucky after graduation. He partnered with other lawyers, including A. B. Chandler and Field McLeod, throughout his career. Rouse also served as president of the Citizens Bank of Midway, as a Woodford County Election Commissioner, and as a special trial judge throughout the state. Rouse was married three times--his wives were Elizabeth Turner (m. 1928, d. pre-1936), Helen Dedman (m. 1936, w. 1987), and Rebecca Adams (m. 1988).https://uknowledge.uky.edu/klapp_1928/1002/thumbnail.jp

    rouse

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    rouse nA hook serving as a support when towing a boat.G. M. Story JUL 1973JH JUL 1973Used IUsed INot use

    Myzostoma kymae Summers, Al-Hakim & Rouse, 2014, n. sp.

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    Myzostoma kymae n. sp. Summers & Rouse Fig. 5 E–I Holotype: SIO-BIC A 3681 hologenophore (1 spm: 95 % ethanol). Madang Harbor, Papua New Guinea (5 ° 12 ' 27.63 "S, 145 ° 48 ' 32.45 "E), 3– 17 m. Collected at night using scuba on 4 December 2012 by MMS and GWR. Genbank (COI—KM014197). Host. Alloeocomatella n. sp. (AH Clark) (Comatulidae, Comatulida, Crinoidea). MNHN-IE 2013-8027 (dried voucher) & SIO-BIC E 5862 (tissue subsample in 95 % ethanol). Genbank (COI—KJ 874980). Paratypes: SIO-BIC A 3682 paragenophore (2 spms: 1—95 % ethanol; 1 —mounted for SEM). Same host and locality as holotype. Etymology. Named for Kym Vercoe, sister-in-law of GWR, in honor of her birthday. Diagnosis and description. Holotype body oval-shaped, ~ 4 mm long, 2 mm wide following fixation. Dorsal longitudinal ridge; otherwise smooth surface (Fig. 5 H). Body margin with 20 short, triangular cirri (Fig. 5 I). Mouth and cloaca on ventral surface. Mouth and cloaca sub-terminal, in line with lateral organs. Proboscis with ~ 20 papillae. Paired penes in line with third pair of parapodia. Five pairs of parapodia, midway between midline and body margin. Lateral organs closer to parapodia than body margin. Color bright red in life, faded in preservative. Remarks. This species most resembles Myzostoma viride Atkins, 1927, which was described from the Great Barrier Reef (Australia) associated with Comanthus annulatus (= Comanthus parvicirrus). This description was of three green-colored specimens with a white anterior-posterior ridge on the dorsal surface and red extended proboscis with papillae. In two of the specimens studied here, the anterior and posterior margins were broadly rounded, while in the third the body tapered to a point posteriorly. We collected yellow specimens, with a dorsal ridge from Comatella nigra (Carpenter) at Lizard Island, Australia. We suggest that these species are most closely allied to the green specimens described, and that the host of Atkin’s specimens may have been Comatella (most of Atkin’s species were described from Comanthus annulatus). Myzostoma kymae n. sp. differs from these specimens assigned to Myzostoma viride in color, placement of mouth (nearer to the body margin in M. viride), lack of clear dorsal ridge, host use, and molecular data (Myzostoma cf. viride published in Summers & Rouse (2014)). The paratype of M. kymae n. sp. is slightly larger, brown, and the proboscis has fewer (~ 7) papillae.Published as part of Summers, Mindi M., Al-Hakim, Iin Inayat & Rouse, Greg W., 2014, Turbo-taxonomy: 21 new species of Myzostomida (Annelida), pp. 301-344 in Zootaxa 3873 (4) on pages 314-316, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3873.4.1, http://zenodo.org/record/25220

    Rouse, Harold M.

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    Irma Rouse - wifehttps://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-ch-memoranda-1932/1641/thumbnail.jp

    Myzostoma josefinae Summers, Al-Hakim & Rouse, 2014, n. sp.

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    Myzostoma josefinae n. sp. Summers & Rouse Fig. 5 A–D Holotype: SIO-BIC A 4016 paragenophore (1 spm: in 70 % ethanol after paraformaldehyde/glutaraldehyde fixation). Near ‘Francisco’ whalefall, Monterey Canyon, California (36 ° 46 ' 19.1994 "N, 122 ° 4 ' 58.7994 "W), 1020 m. Collected via the R/V Western Flyer using the ROV Doc Ricketts (Dive 9) on 10 March 2009 by GWR. Host. Psathyrometra fragilis (AH Clark). SIO-BIC E 4567. Genbank (COI—KM 491780). Paratypes: SIO-BIC A 3798 paragenophores (7 spms: 6 —in 70 % ethanol after paraformaldehyde/ glutaraldehyde fixation; 1—95 % ethanol). Same host and locality as holotype. Genbank (COI—KM014189). SIO- BIC A 3829 syngenophores (12 spms: 6 spms—in 70 % ethanol after paraformaldehyde/glutaraldehyde fixation; 6 spms— 95 % ethanol). Guaymas Basin (26 ° 45 ' 12.8514 "N, 111 ° 10 ' 19.632 "W), 1314 m. Collected via the R/V Western Flyer using the ROV Doc Ricketts (Dive 390) on 16 April 2012 by GWR. Genbank (COI—KM 491749). Host: Psathyrometra fragilis (AH Clark, 1907), SIO-BIC E 6149 (DNA subsample only). Etymology. Named for Josefin Stiller, an enthusiast of polychaetes. Diagnosis and description. Holotype body circular disc with two elongated, cylindrical caudal appendages, approximately as long as body (Fig. 5 A–D). Length ~ 2.1 mm; width ~ 1 mm, following fixation. Body margin with 18 cirri, alternating in length, most anterior pair up to twice as long as the rest (Fig. 5 C–D). Caudal appendages with long terminal cirri. Mouth terminal. Proboscis smooth [seen in paratypes]. Cloaca terminal, between caudal appendages. Paired penes. Five pairs of parapodia, positioned two-thirds of way from center of disc to margin. Remarks. Myzostoma josefinae n. sp. is the first myzostomid with paired elongate caudal appendages described from the eastern Pacific and Psathyrometra fragilis. Four other species are known to possess paired elongate caudal appendages, two recovered on Antedonidae, one from Comatulidae, one possibly with a Mariametroidea, and one associated with an uncertain host (Table 1). Myzostoma josefinae n. sp. is most similar in form to M. divisor Grygier, 1989, M. filicauda Graff, 1883, and M. tentaculatum Jägersten, 1940 a. Myzostoma filicauda was recorded on Coccometra hagenii (Pourtalès) (Antedonidae) from Sand Key, Florida. Myzostoma divisor was described from Promachocrinus kerguelensis Carpenter (Antedonidae) from Antarctica, and the description includes notes on the juvenile stages. Myzostoma tentaculatum was described from Japan, on an unknown host. As all identified hosts for this set of taxa are Antedonidae, it is likely that M. tentaculatum was collected on a Japanese antedonid. In addition to differences in host and locality, Myzostoma josefinae n. sp. is distinguished from M. divisor by molecular data published by Summers & Rouse (2014) and in having marginal cirri of unequal length (equal in M. divisor), M. filicauda by lacking papillae on the proboscis, and from M. tentaculatum by the length of the most anterior pair of cirri (six times longer than rest, resembling ‘tentacles’, in M. tentaculatum). Two other taxa have two elongate caudal appendages. Myzostoma bicaudatum Graff, 1883 was described from Comactinia meridionalis (Agassiz) west of Tortugas in the Caribbean. Myzostoma filiferum Graff, 1884 a was recorded on Antedon bidentata (nomen nudum) (possibly Heterometra variipinna (Carpenter) from the Torres Strait. [Nomenclatural issue of M. filiferum and M. filicauda discussed in Grygier (1989)]. Myzostoma bicaudatum and M. filiferum differ from M. filicauda, M. divisor, and M. josefinae n. sp. by possessing 20 (rather than 18) marginal cirri on the main body. In addition, M. bicaudatum is unique among all of the forms by having a subterminal mouth and lacking terminal cirri on the caudal appendages. Myzostoma divisor and M. josefinae n. sp. were recovered as well-supported sister-taxa in the molecular phylogeny of Summers & Rouse (2014). We suspect that M. filicauda and M. tentaculatum will form a clade with these two taxa, while the evolutionary affinity of M. bicaudatum and M. filiferum may instead be with myzostomids with caudal processes and 20 marginal cirri, associated with Comatulidae and Mariametroidea respectively. The type specimens for M. bicaudatum, M. filiferum, and M. filicauda have been lost, and the location of types of M. tentaculatum is unknown.Published as part of Summers, Mindi M., Al-Hakim, Iin Inayat & Rouse, Greg W., 2014, Turbo-taxonomy: 21 new species of Myzostomida (Annelida), pp. 301-344 in Zootaxa 3873 (4) on pages 313-314, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3873.4.1, http://zenodo.org/record/25220

    J. M. Cruxent et Irving Rouse, Archeologia chronologica de Venezuela

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    Lévi-Strauss Claude. J. M. Cruxent et Irving Rouse, Archeologia chronologica de Venezuela. In: L'Homme, 1963, tome 3 n°3. pp. 126-127

    rouse chocks

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    rouse nThe 'Service' . . . is a piece of brin or canvas which was wrapped around the rope at the point where it passes through the "rouse chocks"DNE-cit [see other side for diagram](shown in diagram 1A and diagram No. 32) (see appendix) see other side for diagramG. M. Story FEB 1973 JH FEB 1973Used IUsed IUsed IReverse of card at R_1485
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