147 research outputs found

    Tenants of Unhousement

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    Exile Vol. VII No. 1

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    EDITORIAL 4 Silent Strife (story) by Robert Kribbs 5-12 Six Haiku (poems) by Jean Ludwig 13 Carter (sketch) by Sara Curtis 14-16 FELT PEN DRAWING by Lucinda Piersol 17 A Summer Chapter (narrative) by Clark Blaise 18-24 One, Two, Button My (poem) Sara Curtis 25 To Recognize the Chair (poem) by Linda Chase 26 In Case of the Twelfth Pig by Linda Chase 27 Awarded the semi-annual EXILE-Denison Bookstore Writing Prize: A Summer Chapter by Clark Blaise 18-2

    An Interview with Bharati Mukherjee

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    Exile Vol. VII No. 2

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    EDITORIAL 4 The Catcher (woodcut) by Wilford Baumes 6 The Littlest Orphan (story) by Clark Blaise 7-17 Dead Tree (poem) by Christine Cooper 17 Two Poems by Janet Tallman 18-19 Untitled (pen and ink drawing) by Virginia Piersol 20 The Monkey (story) by Nancy Schieber 21-24 To Kandinsky (poem) by Linda Chase 24 Athena (line etching) by Virginia Piersol 25 Visions of Peanut Chocolates (poem) by Linda Chase 26 The Second Day of Summer (story) by Neil J. Weintraub 27-39 Great Exploitations (poem) by Linda Chase 40 Awarded the semi-annual EXILE-Denison Bookstore Writing Prize: The Littlest Orphan by Clark Blaise 7-1

    Exile Vol. XVIII

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    POETRY The Man And His Table by Al Werder 3 Ours by Debra Tucker 6 Running through rows and pile of leaves by Molly O\u27neill 12 Looking Glass by Alice Colthart 13 16 Years Old by Peter Porteous 14-15 a feather by Judy Meloy 28 I kicked summer\u27s shed garments by Bruce P. Andre 29 Tuesday Afternoon by Juliet Lockwood 30 snuggled deep inside by Judi Hasel 31 Star Spangled Pterdactyl by Peter Porteous 44 Billy\u27s by Suzi Harriss 45 Hong Kong by Peter Porteous 46 Ennui by Debra Tucker 47 pathetic collapse by Bruce P. Andre 48 In place of alphabet by Suzi Harriss 51 Encore by Richard Glaser 58 reflections disrupt by Judi Hasel 60 FICTION Eyes by Clark Blaise 7-11 Characters From New Mexico Life by Ardyth Hilts 16-27 Hospital Scene by Dennis Trudell 34-35 A Late Morning by Peter Porteous 36-42 Accident by Richard Glaser 52-57 ART Cover by Gail Lutsch by Jane Demos 5 by Tom Coulter 10 by Maria Ramoki 13 by Vicki Haskell 11, 15 by Alex Hutton 20 by Pat Menster 31, 59 by Scott Kenan 43 by Ann Merrill 46 by James Lautz PHOTOGRAPHY by Kathy Kerschner 1, 2, 62, 36, 64 by Bruce P. Andre 7, 28, 49 by Bruce Marshall 32, 36, 42, 61 to Paul Bennett, founder of Exile, teacher, 25 years. 2 The following previous graduates of Denison University contributed pieces of fiction to this issue of Exile: Clark Blaise \u2761 (Eyes 7-11) and Dennis Trudell \u2760 (Hospital Scene 34-35

    Oxygen Isotope Analysis of Human Bone Phosphate Evidences Weaning Age in Archaeological Populations

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    Acknowledgements With special thanks to Jean-Jacques Hublin and the MPI-EVA; to Annabell Reiner (MPI-EVA) and Bernd Steinhilber (Universitat Tubingen) for technical support;and to the Deutscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst for financial support to KB during this project (ref: A0970923). This research was funded by the Max Planck Society. TT was financed by the DFG Emmy Noether Program and acknowledges funding by the grant TU 148/2-1 for the Emmy Noether Group Bone Geochemistry. Thanks also tothe University of Aberdeen for support during the preparation of this manuscript.Peer reviewedPostprin

    A funds of knowledge approach to examining play interests: listening to children’s and parents’ perspectives.

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    Children’s interests are widely recognised as pivotal to meaningful learning and play in the early years. However, less is known about how children’s diverse interests may contribute to relationships within peer cultures. This article builds upon previous studies to argue that participation in sociocultural activity generates interests informed by funds of knowledge that children reconstruct in their play. It reports findings from an interpretive study that used filmed footage of children’s play as a provocation to explore the perspectives of children, parents and teachers. The article presents original insights regarding some ways in which mutually constituted funds of knowledge afford opportunities for children to co-construct meaning within peer cultures. The findings also indicate that interests arising from diverse funds of knowledge may contribute to the interplay of power, agency and status during play. This raises some issues regarding how matters of inclusion and exclusion are understood and responded to within early years settings. The article recommends that teachers and researchers engage critically with children’s individual and collective funds of knowledge in order to better understand the complexities of play cultures

    Graft-versus-Host Disease Prophylaxis with Post- Transplantation Cyclophosphamide in Chronic Myeloid Leukemia Patients Undergoing Allogeneic Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation from an Unrelated or Mismatched Related Donor: A Comparative Study from the Chronic Malignancies Working Party of the EBMT (CMWP-EBMT).

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    peer reviewedOutcomes following allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT) for chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) with post-transplantation cyclophosphamide (PTCy) using an unrelated donor (UD) or a mismatched related donor (MMRD) remain unknown. We report a retrospective comparison of PTCy-based allo-HCT from a UD, non-PTCy allo-HCT from a UD, and PTCy allo-HCT from an MMRD. Inclusion criteria were adult patients with CML undergoing first allo-HCT between 2012 and 2019 from a UD with either PTCy or non-PTCy graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) prophylaxis or from an MMRD using PTCy. The primary endpoint was GVHD-free/relapse-free survival (GRFS). A total of 1341 patients were included (82% in the non-PTCy UD cohort). With a median follow-up of 34.9 months, the 3-year GRFS was 43% in the non-PTCy cohort, 37% in the PTCy-UD cohort, and 39% PTCy-MMRD cohort (P = .15). Multivariable analyses revealed no significant differences among the 3 cohorts in terms of overall survival (OS), progression-free survival, RI, and nonrelapse mortality. Factors independently associated with worse OS in the overall cohort were Karnofsky Performance Status 2 (HR, 1.58; 95% CI, 1.15 to 2.17; P = .005). These results suggest that allo-HCT in patients with CML using either a UD or an MMRD with PTCy-based GVHD prophylaxis are feasible transplantation, platforms and that the disease stage at allo-HCT remains a major prognostic factor, highlighting the importance of closely monitoring CML patients and proposing transplantation when indicated when still in CP1
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