92 research outputs found

    Exile Vol. VIII No. 2

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    FICTION ...like before on Nantasket Bay by Harry Cohen 5-10 The War and the Old Women by John Hunting 13-19 Touch of Winter by Anne Winget 26-37 POETRY Bathtub by Christine Cooper 10 Away by Susan Delano 12 Fixed Orion by Barbara Purdy 21 Three Poems by Barbara Purdy 22-23 Not the Song by Christine Cooper 24 The Best Laid Plans by Susan Delano 39 On the Creation of the Grecian Urn by Christine Cooper 40 GRAPHICS line drawing by Beverly Erbacher 11 woodcut by Jacquelyn Sims 20 woodcut by Elizabeth Surbeck 25 etching by Mrs. Lynn McKenna 38 Awarded the semi-annual EXILE-Denison Bookstore Writing Prize: ...like before on Nantasket Bay by Harry Cohen 5-10 The Best Laid Plans by Susan Delano is listed as page 34 in the published table of contents, however, this work actually appears on page 39 of this issue

    Exile Vol. VIII No. 1

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    FICTION Chance Encounter by Meredith Rose 5-12 The Chosen One by William Weaver 15-23 No Fuss, No Muss by Barbara Thiele 30-36 Easter Sunday by Christine Cooper 38-39 POETRY Two Poems by Barbara Purdy 12-13 Myself by Christine Cooper 24-25 The Kangaroo by Virginia Schott 27 Upon Remembering the Once-Novelty of Icicles by Barbara Purdy 27 Coming Awake by Janet Tallman 28 Poem by Christine Cooper 29 The Orb Weaver by Elizabeth Biggert 29 III Haiku by Robert Hoyt 37 GRAPHICS linocut by Beverly Erbacher 14 pen and ink by Jackie Sims 26 woodcut by Elizabeth Surbeck EDITORIAL A Sense of Finality by William Weaver 4 Awarded the EXILE-Denison Bookstore Writing Prize: The Chosen One by William Weaver 15-23 pen and ink 26 was originally credited to Elizabeth Surbeck. However the bound copy has Jackie Sims listed as the correct name in pencil. This interpretation is followed, though there is no Jackie Sims listed in the Contributors sectio

    Exile Vol. VIIb

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    FICTION Himself by James Kennedy 9-30 Sardo by Joan Harrington 34-36 Doll House by Bruce Tracy 37-42 The Della Baby by Brenda Dean 47-53 Cruel White by Carolyn Colley 57-66 Almost Every Sunday by Sara Easton Curtis 69-74 A Family by William Weaver 78-86 POETRY Spring Songs by Janet Tallman 32-33 Poem by Katherine Lardner 42 Four Poems by Elizabeth Surbeck 43 Indian Pike Mask by James Funaro 44 The Windigo by James Funaro 45 Query by Barbara Purdy 53 A Taste of Eden by Barbara Purdy 53 The Passion of Jeremiah by Barbara Purdy 53 Statement and Comment by Enid Larimer 54-55 Poem by Barbara Thiele 56 Poem by Catherine Thompson 68 Drifting into a Museum Case by Catherine Thompson 68 To Judy by Tanya Shriver 76-77 Sun One by Sara Easton Curtis 86 Poem by Christine Cooper 87 GRAPHICS woodcut by Catherine Thompson 8 etching by Catherine Thompson 17 Two Models (aquatint) by Virginia Piersol 31 woodcut by Elizabeth Surbeck 46 woodcut by Virginia Piersol 67 linocut by John Hand 75 EDITORIAL Wintering by James W Kennedy 5-7 Poem 68 Drifting into a Museum Case 68 and To Judy 76 are all incorrectly attributed to Barbara Thiele in the published Table of Contents. The attributions given above are taken from the pages on which the works are published. The Contributors section of this issue confirms this interpretation. Awarded the EXILE-Denison Bookstore Writing Prize: Himself by James Kennedy 9-3

    Targets of the Entamoeba histolytica Transcription Factor URE3-BP

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    The Entamoeba histolytica transcription factor Upstream Regulatory Element 3-Binding Protein (URE3-BP) is a calcium-responsive regulator of two E. histolytica virulence genes, hgl5 and fdx1. URE3-BP was previously identified by a yeast one-hybrid screen of E. histolytica proteins capable of binding to the sequence TATTCTATT (Upstream Regulatory Element 3 (URE3)) in the promoter regions of hgl5 and fdx1. In this work, precise definition of the consensus URE3 element was performed by electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSA) using base-substituted oligonucleotides, and the consensus motif validated using episomal reporter constructs. Transcriptome profiling of a strain induced to produce a dominant-positive URE3-BP was then used to identify additional genes regulated by URE3-BP. Fifty modulated transcripts were identified, and of these the EMSA defined motif T[atg]T[tc][cg]T[at][tgc][tg] was found in over half of the promoters (54% p<0.0001). Fifteen of the URE3-BP regulated genes were potential membrane proteins, suggesting that one function of URE3-BP is to remodel the surface of E. histolytica in response to a calcium signal. Induction of URE3-BP leads to an increase in tranwell migration, suggesting a possible role in the regulation of cellular motility

    From Interactions to Institutions: Microprocesses of Framing and Mechanisms for the Structuring of Institutional Fields

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    Despite the centrality of meaning to institutionalization, little attention has been paid to how meanings evolve and amplify to become institutionalized cultural conventions. We develop an interactional framing perspective to explain the microprocesses and mechanisms by which this occurs. We identify three amplification processes and three ways frames stack up or laminate that become the building blocks for diffusion and institutionalization of meanings within organizations and fields. Although we focus on β€œbottom-up” dynamics, we argue that framing occurs in a politicized social context and is inherently bidirectional, in line with structuration, because microlevel interactions instantiate macrostructures. We consider how our approach complements other theories of meaning making, its utility for informing related theoretical streams, and its implications for organizing at the meso and macro levels

    Weapons, Strategies, and Tactics of the Europeans and the Indians in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Florida

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    The Indians of Florida were hostile to white explorers, adventurers, colonists, and missionaries from the time of Ponce de LeΓ³n’s encounter in 1513 until 1710 when it was reported, β€œthere remains not now so much as one Village with ten Houses in it, in all Florida, that is subject to the Spaniards.β€œ These were the Apalachee and Timucua Indians of northwest and central Florida, but it is known that the Tocobago Indians had been destroyed by 1709. The Ais, never many in number, seem to have disappeared sometime during the first half of the eighteenth century, and the Tekesta were finally exterminated by bands of raiding Creeks. Some historians believe the last remnants of these and the Calusa Indians went to Havana with the Spaniards in 1763, but there is evidence that a few Calusa Indians remained near Charlotte Harbor and later supported the Seminoles

    Collaborating for Our Future: Multistakeholder Partnerships for Solving Complex Problems

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    Organizations turn to multistakeholder partnerships (MSPs) to meet challenges that they cannot handle alone. By tapping the resources of diverse stakeholders, MSPs develop the capability to address complex issues and problems, such as health care delivery, poverty, human rights, watershed management, education, sustainability, and innovation. This book provides a comprehensive understanding of MSPs, why they are needed, the challenges partners face in working together and how to design them effectively. Through the process of collaboration partners combine their differing strengths, vantage points and expertise to craft innovative responses to pressing societal concerns. The book offers valuable advice for leaders about how to design and scale up effective partnerships and how to address potential obstacles that partners may face.Drawing on three comprehensive cases and countless shorter examples from around the world, the book offers both practical advice for organization embarking on an MSP as well as a theoretical understanding of how partnerships function. Using an institutional theory lens, it explains how partnerships can effect change in institutional fields by reducing turbulence and negotiating a common set of norms and routines to govern partners\u27 future interactions within the field of concern.https://digitalcommons.tacoma.uw.edu/business_books/1003/thumbnail.jp

    Enduring records The environmental and cultural heritage of wetlands

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    Includes bibliographical referencesAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:9261. 86732(15) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo
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