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Journal articles on the topic "Webber, Margareta"

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Dougherty, Kevin J. "Analyzing the Development of Education in America." Studies in American Political Development 6, no. 2 (1992): 445–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0898588x00001048.

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Social scientists have long been interested in the development of education. Mustafa Emirbayer and Clyde Barrow, whose essays appear in this volume, have many illustrious predecessors including political scientists Ira Katznelson and Margaret Weir; economists Max Weber, Albert Fishlow, Samuel Bowles and Herbert Gintis, and Martin Carnoy and Henry Levin; and sociologists Emile Durkheim, John Meyer, Martin Trow, Randall Collins, Joseph Ben David, Julia Wrigley, and Margaret Archer.
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Whayne. "Margaret Weber Talks to Jeannie Whayne for Agricultural History." Agricultural History 89, no. 1 (2015): 29. http://dx.doi.org/10.3098/ah.2015.089.1.29.

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CLARK, GEOFFREY. "COMMERCE, CULTURE, AND THE RISE OF ENGLISH POWER." Historical Journal 49, no. 4 (November 24, 2006): 1239–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x06005814.

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Barclays: the business of banking, 1690–1996. By Margaret Ackrill and Leslie Hannah. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. Pp. xxi+481. ISBN 0-521-79035-2. £45.00.The worlds of the East India Company. Edited by H. V. Bowen, Margarette Lincoln, and Nigel Rigby. Woodbridge: Boydell, 2002. Pp. xvii+246. ISBN 0-85115-877-3. £45.00.Kingship and crown finance under James VI and I, 1603–1625. By John Cramsie. Woodbridge: Boydell, 2002. Pp. xi+242. ISBN 0-86193-259-5. £50.00.Mammon's music: literature and economics in the age of Milton. By Blair Hoxby. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2002. Pp. xii+320. ISBN 0-300-09378-0. $45.00.Usury, interest, and the Reformation. By Eric Kerridge. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2002. Pp. 206. ISBN 0-7546-0688-0. £55.00.The rise of commercial empires: England and the Netherlands in the age of mercantilism, 1650–1770. By David Ormrod. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Pp. xvii+400. ISBN 0-521-81926-1. £55.00.The rhetoric of credit: merchants in early modern writing. By Ceri Sullivan. London: Associated University Presses, 2002. Pp. 217. ISBN 0-8386-3926-7. £38.00.The unshackling of the European economy from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries was achieved, ironically, by the forging of new and stronger chains of trade and credit within nations, across regions, and around the globe. The seven books under review explore that process from different disciplinary standpoints, but chiefly as it affected England, the country that would become emblematic of commercial advancement and under whose sway the modern capitalist system emerged. How England managed this feat financially and commercially, politically and culturally, amidst the shifting opportunities and perils of these centuries is answered with an often impressive sophistication and imagination that take us well beyond hackneyed analyses prompted by the Weber–Tawney thesis.
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Busch, Regina. "Leopold Spinner: A List of his works." Tempo, no. 154 (September 1985): 22–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s004029820002146x.

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When René Leibowitz was preparing the first performance of the Piano Concerto op.4 in 1949 (it was for this occasion that Spinner made the transcription for chamber orchestra, which is the only version of the piece that is known, printed, and performed), he asked Spinner for some details about his work and himself. The answer was characteristic:…Nun schliesslich, Sie würden gerne Einzelheiten von mir wissen: Ich bin 42, habe eine Frau und ein Kind (Margaret, 6 Jahre), das ist ganz privat narürlich (aber für mich sehr wichtig, darum erwähne ich es)! Ich habe bei Webern studiert. Was ich bis jetzt geschrieben habe, fängt mit der Sonate für Violin und Klavier op.1 an, dann ein Streichquartett op.2, eine Sonate für Klavier op.3. Op.4 kennen Sie bereits.
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KITLV, Redactie. "Book reviews." Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde / Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia 168, no. 1 (2012): 130–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134379-90003574.

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Chie Ikeya, Refiguring women, colonialism, and modernity in Burma (Henk Schulte Nordholt) Thomas J. Conners, Mason C. Hoadley, Frank Dhont, Kevin Ko (eds), Pancasila’s contemporary appeal: Relegitimizing Indonesia’s founding ethos (R.E. Elson) I Nyoman Darma Putra, A literary mirror: Balinese reflections on modernity and identity in the twentieth century (Dick van der Meij) Margaret Jolly. Serge Tcherkézoff and Darrell Tryon (eds), Oceanic encounters: Exchange, desire, violence (H.J.M. Claessen) Rudolf Mrázek, A certain age: Colonial Jakarta through the memories of its intellectuals (Lutgard Mutsaers) Jan Ovesen and Ing-Britt Trankell, Cambodians and their doctors: A medical anthropology of colonial and post-colonial Cambodia (Vivek Neelakantan) Daromir Rudnyckyj, Spiritual economies: Islam, globalization and the afterlife of development (Gabrial Facal) Claudine Salmon, Sastra Indonesia awal: Kontribusi orang Tionghoa (Melani Budianta) Renate Sternagel, Der Humboldt von Java: Leben und Werk des Naturforschers Franz Wilhelm Junghuhn 1809-1864 (Andreas Weber) Wynn Wilcox (ed.), Vietnam and the West: New approaches (Hans Hägerdal) Zheng Yangwen and Charles J.H Macdonald (eds), Personal names in Asia: History, culture and identity (Rosemary Gianno)
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Young, Trieu, Chia-Min Chu, Wei Xu, Peter Anglin, Suzanne Trudel, Donna E. Reece, Christine Chen, and Vishal Kukreti. "Activity with Thalidomide-Based Therapy Following Lenalidomide Plus Dexamethasone in Patients with Relapsed/Refractory Multiple Myeloma." Blood 114, no. 22 (November 20, 2009): 3855. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.v114.22.3855.3855.

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Abstract Abstract 3855 Poster Board III-791 The optimal sequence of therapy in multiple myeloma (MM) remains unknown. Thalidomide (Thal) is the first immunomodulatory agent used for treating MM with anti-angiogenic properties and anti-inflammatory effects. Thereafter, Thal derived immunomodulatory compounds (IMiDs®) such as lenalidomide and pomalidomide were developed. These drugs are more potent than Thal with respect to stimulating T-cell proliferation and augmenting IL-2 and IFN-γ production. We know from previous MM clinical trials that lenalidomide is still effective after prior Thal exposure (Weber, Bloor 2007) but the use of Thal post lenalidomide based-therapy is unknown. At Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH), we have evaluated the use of Thal based therapy following treatment with lenalidomide plus dexamethasone (Len/Dex) for relapsed/refractory (rel/ref) disease. These patients were identified from PMH patients seen in the Expanded Access Program (MM016) and clinical trials for rel/ref disease. All patients were treated with Thal based treatment as the next therapy following progression on Len/Dex. Between December 2005 and May 2009, we identified 16 patients (10 males, 6 females); median age was 67 (range 44-83) years. With regards to previous therapy, 14 had undergone autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT). Importantly, 4 patients had Thal induction therapy pre-ASCT for short duration of time at initial diagnosis while 12 patients had no prior Thal exposure. Before current Thal treatment, 3 patients had 2 prior lines of therapy, 5 had 3 prior lines of therapy; 4 had 4 prior lines of therapy and 4 with greater than 5 prior lines of therapy. With respect to immunoglobulin subtype, 6 were IgG, 7 with IgA and 3 with light chain disease only. At initial presentation, prognostic factors included a median β2m of 245 nmol/L, albumin of 39 g/L and creatinine of 88 μmol/L. Seven patients presented with ISS stage 1 disease, 7 with stage 2 and 2 with stage 3. With regards to Len/Dex therapy, the median duration of response was 8.7 months (range 1.4 to 45 months). The best haematological response to Len/Dex included CR for 1 patient, nCR for 3 patients, VGPR for 5 patients, PR for 5 patients and MR for 2 patients. Thereafter, Thal based therapy included steroids for 6 patients and alkylators with steroids in 10. The median follow up from start of Thal was 6.1 months (range 1.0 to 14.8). The median duration of Thal based therapy was 2.4 months (range 1.0 to 10.7). Best response to Thal based therapy was 3 (18%) PR, 4 (25%) MR and 7 (44%) with SD. Two patients had progressive disease. At time of analysis, only one patient remains on Thal with the rest having progressed on therapy. Only 4 patients remain alive at analysis. In conclusion, the use of Thal based therapy post Len/Dex therapy results in a short median duration of response of 2.4 months with at best a partial response of 18% in this heavily treated population. Thalidomide maybe considered as a therapeutic option although this needs to be evaluated in a larger randomized study. Disclosures: Trudel: Celgene: Honoraria, Speakers Bureau; Ortho Biotech: Honoraria. Reece:Ortho Biotech: Honoraria, Research Funding. Chen:Celgene: Honoraria. Kukreti:Celgene: Honoraria.
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VAZ-DE-MELLO, FERNANDO Z. "Synopsis of the new subtribe Scatimina (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae: Ateuchini), with descriptions of twelve new genera and review of Genieridium, new genus." Zootaxa 1955, no. 1 (December 5, 2008): 1–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1955.1.1.

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The new subtribe Scatimina (part of the tribe Ateuchini) is described and defined to include the following 17 genera, of which 12 are new: Scatimus Erichson; Scatrichus Génier & Kohlmann, 2003; Trichillum Harold, 1868; Pedaridium Harold, 1868; Eutrichillum Martínez, 1969, new status; Besourenga, new genus (type species Trichillum minutum Saylor); Bradypodidium, new genus (type species Trichillum bradyporum Boucomont); Degallieridium, new genus (typespecies Degallieridium lilliputanum, new species); Feeridium, new genus (type species Feeridium woodruffi, new spe- cies); Genieridium, new genus (type species Pedaridium bidens Balthasar); Leotrichillum, new genus (type species Pedaridium louzadaorum Vaz-de-Mello & Canhedo); Martinezidium, new genus (type species Pedaridium galileoae Génier & Vaz-de-Mello); Nunoidium, new genus (type species Pedaridium argentinum Arrow); Onoreidium, new genus (type species Trichillum cristatum Arrow); Pereiraidium, new genus (type species Pedaridium almeidai Pereira); Silvinha, new genus (type species Silvinha unica, new species); and Trichillidium, new genus (type species Pedaridium quadridens Arrow). The subtribe Ateuchina Laporte is here defined and includes Ateuchus Weber, Deltorhinum Harold, Aphengium Harold and Sinapisoma Boucomont (transferred from Canthonini). The genera Scatonomus Erichson, Anomiopus Westwood and Hypocanthidium Balthasar are transferred from Ateuchini to Canthonini, and the genera Canthidium Erichson, Parachorius Harold (formerly Ateuchini) and Holocanthon Martínez & Pereira (formerly Canthonini) are transferred to Coprini. The genera Bdelyropsis Pereira, Vulcano & Martínez, Bdelyrus Harold, Coptorhina Hope, Delopleurus Erichson, Demarziella Balthasar, Onychothecus Boucomont, Paraphytus Harold, Pedaria Laporte, Pleronyx Lansberge, Pseuduroxys Balthasar, Sarophorus Erichson and Uroxys Westwood are considered as incerta sedis in the Ateuchini, not fitting into Ateuchina or Scatimina. A key is presented to the genera of Scatimina, and another for species of the genus Genieridium, which are also diagnosed. Each genus of Scatimina is diagnosed, has a complete species list, and includes remarks on affinities, composition and distribution. All genera except Scatimus and Scatrichus are (re)described, and examined material is listed for each species. The following three new species are described: Degallieridium lilliputanum, new species; Feeridium woodruffi, new species and Silvinha unica, new species. The following 32 new combinations are established (original genus in parenthesis): Besourenga minutus (Saylor) (Trichillum); B. vejdovskyi (Balthasar) (Trichillum); B. amarillai (Aguilar) (Pedaridium); B. horacioi (Martínez) (Trichillum); Bradypodidium adisi (Ratcliffe) (Trichillum); B. bradyporum (Boucomont) (Trichillum); B. venezuelense (Ferreira & Galileo) (Pedaridium); Eutrichillum arcus (Solís & Kohlmann) (Trichillum); E. hirsutum (Boucomont) (Trichillum); E. hystrix (Arrow) (Trichillum); Genieridium bidens (Balthasar) (Pedaridium); G. bordoni (Martínez) (Pedaridium); G. cryptops (Arrow) (Pedaridium); G. margareteae (Génier & Vaz-de-Mello) (Pedaridium); G. medinae (Gill & Vaz-de-Mello) (Pedaridium); G. paranense (Arrow) (Pedaridium); G. zanunciorum (Vaz-de-Mello & Canhedo) (Pedaridium); Leotrichillum louzadaorum (Vaz-de-Mello & Canhedo) (Pedaridium); Martinezidium fulgens (Arrow) (Pedaridium); M. galileoae (Génier & Vaz-de-Mello) (Pedaridium); M. martinsi (Ferreira & Galileo) (Pedaridium); M. maya (Vaz-de-Mello, Halffter, & Halffter) (Pedaridium); Nunoidium argentinum (Arrow) (Pedaridium); Onoreidium bottimeri (Howden & Young) (Pedaridium); O. cristatum (Arrow) (Trichillum); O. howdeni (Ferreira & Galileo) (Pedaridium); O. ohausi (Arrow) (Trichillum); Pereiraidium almeidai (Pereira) (Pedaridium); Trichillidium brevisetosum (Howden & Young) (Pedaridium); T. caingua (Martínez) (Pedaridium); T. pilosum (Robinson) (Trichillum); Trichillidium quadridens (Arrow) (Pedaridium). Distribution maps are presented for the newly described species, for Nunoidium argentinum, for Pereiraidium almeidai, and for every species of Genieridium.
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Kraidy, Marwan M. "Fantasy or Ethnography? Irony and Collusion in Subaltern Representation: Conference Proceedings in Honor of Elizabeth Warnock Fernea, edited by Sabra J. Webber, Margaret R. Lynd, and Kristin Peterson. (Papers in Comparative Studies, Vol. 8) 256 pages, b&w plates, figures. Columbus, OH: The Ohio State University Division of Comparative Studies, 1993-1994. $10.00 (Paper) ISBN 0-736-9123." Middle East Studies Association Bulletin 32, no. 2 (1998): 183–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026318400037329.

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Collier, Katharine A., David Tallman, Zachary T. Weber, Marcy Haynam, Elizabeth J. Adams, Janet Jenison, Sarah Asad, et al. "Abstract P3-09-09: Serial circulating tumor DNA from patients with metastatic breast cancer with and without BRCA1/2 mutations." Cancer Research 82, no. 4_Supplement (February 15, 2022): P3–09–09—P3–09–09. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1538-7445.sabcs21-p3-09-09.

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Abstract Background: Analysis of circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) over time allows non-invasive evaluation of tumor genomic evolution. We characterize changes in tumor fraction (TFx), somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs), and somatic mutations over time in patients (pts) with and without BRCA1/2 mutations and metastatic breast cancer (mBC) who received a PARP inhibitor (PARPi) or platinum chemotherapy. Specifically, we seek to identify the frequency of BRCA1/2 reversion mutations. Methods: Pts with mBC and germline or somatic BRCA1/2 mutations were identified on a banking protocol of prospectively-collected serial samples of blood and plasma. Control pts without a BRCA1/2 mutation were matched 2:1 by age and hormone receptor (HR) status. Ultra-low-pass whole genome sequencing (ULPWGS) with 0.1x depth was performed on all plasma samples (n=103) and the ichorCNA algorithm was used to determine TFx and SCNAs. Targeted panel sequencing (TPS) of 402 cancer-related genes was performed at 10,000x depth on plasma samples, and one blood sample per pt. The panel includes BRCA1/2 and 38 other DNA damage repair (DDR) genes. Somatic mutations were identified by joint calling with Mutect2 across plasma timepoints with paired pt normal blood. Germline variant calling from TPS on blood with HaplotypeCaller was used to confirm germline mutations in BRCA1/2. Results: We identified 10 pts with mBC with a germline (n=7) or somatic (n=3) BRCA1 (n=2) or BRCA2 (n=8) mutation and banked blood and plasma samples at 2-9 timepoints at a median of 8 weeks apart (range 1-43). The control cohort of 20 pts with mBC and wildtype BRCA1/2 was well matched by age and HR status. All pts with BRCA1/2 mutations received a PARPi and/or platinum chemotherapy at some point during sample collection. Half of control pts received platinum chemotherapy. Germline BRCA1/2 mutations were confirmed in all 7 pts with known germline mutations. Somatic BRCA2 mutations were confirmed in ctDNA in 2 of 3 patients. Among all samples, median TFx was 0.05 (range 0-0.80) with 35% of samples having TFx >0.10. There was no significant difference in TFx by age, receptor status, or active treatment with a PARPi or platinum. There was no significant change in the percent of genome with a SCNA over time. A reversion mutation of a germline BRCA2 mutation, restoring the open reading frame of BRCA2, was discovered at the last timepoint from 1 pt while receiving carboplatin. She had radiographic progression 4 weeks later. A germline BRCA1/2 reversion mutation in this cohort occurred in 2.3% of samples, 14.3% of pts. The somatic mutation landscape and clonal evolution of TPS using PyClone will be presented. Clonal evolution can show emerging and responding clusters of variants. For pts with available tissue specimens, somatic variants in ctDNA will be compared to somatic mutations detected in tissue with TPS. Conclusions: Evaluation of serial ctDNA samples for TFx, SCNAs, and somatic mutations from banked plasma and blood from pts with mBC is feasible. SCNAs were stable over time. The frequency of reversion mutations in BRCA1/2 was low, suggesting that either their incidence is low or ctDNA TPS is not sensitive enough to detect them. Citation Format: Katharine A Collier, David Tallman, Zachary T. Weber, Marcy Haynam, Elizabeth J. Adams, Janet Jenison, Sarah Asad, Maryam Lustberg, Mathew Cherian, Bhuvaneswari Ramaswamy, Sagar Sardesai, Nicole Williams, Robert Wesolowski, Jeffrey Vandeusen, Margaret E. Gatti-Mays, Ashley Pariser, Amir Mortazavi, Daniel G. Stover. Serial circulating tumor DNA from patients with metastatic breast cancer with and without BRCA1/2 mutations [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2021 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2021 Dec 7-10; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(4 Suppl):Abstract nr P3-09-09.
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Yeboah, Elizabeth, Esther Masih-Khan, Christine Massey, Donna E. Reece, Suzanne Trudel, Vishal Kukreti, Peter Anglin, and Christine Chen. "Prolonged Use of Lenalidomide (≥12 Cycles) for Multiple Myeloma (MM) Is Frequently Affected by Dose-Limiting Thrombocytopenia but Is Associated with Improved Quality of Response and Survival." Blood 114, no. 22 (November 20, 2009): 1866. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.v114.22.1866.1866.

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Abstract Abstract 1866 Poster Board I-891 Introduction: Lenalidomide is currently approved for use in relapsed/refractory MM based on two large phase III trials accruing >700 patients (pts)(Dimopoulos et al, 2007; Weber et al, 2007). Subsequently, an Extended Access Program (EAP) supplied lenalidomide to an additional 1438 pts, providing confirmatory safety data (Chen et al, 2009). In this EAP protocol, lenalidomide was initiated in combination with dexamethasone at the same dose/schedule as that of the randomized trials. For all pts on the EAP, the median duration on therapy was short at 15.4 weeks (range 0.1–49.1), as most pts stopped protocol due to commercial availability of lenalidomide in the US. At our Canadian site, due to delays in lenalidomide availability, we maintained pts on the EAP until progressive disease (PD) or excessive toxicity. Of 122 MM pts on the EAP at our institution, 44(36%) received prolonged lenalidomide (≥12 cycles). We hypothesized that prolonged lenalidomide would be associated with improved progression-free survival (PFS) and aimed to identify disease/treatment variables that affect duration on therapy. Methods: From Sept 2005-Dec 2008, 122 relapsed/refractory MM pts treated on the EAP protocol at Princess Margaret Hospital were reviewed; 44(36%) of whom received ≥12 cycles of lenalidomide (Group 1), 78(64%) of who received <12 cycles (Group 2). Patient eligibility was identical to the pivotal phase III studies. Lenalidomide was initiated at 25mg PO daily for 21days with dexamethasone 40mg PO days 1–4, 9–12, 17–20 every 28day cycle. Comparison of variables (demographics, baseline disease characteristics, treatment details, responses, survival) between the 2 groups was performed. Results: Survival: As expected, both PFS and overall survival (OS) were prolonged for Group 1 versus Group 2: median PFS 21.8 vs 2.9 mos (p<0.0001); median OS > 42.5 vs 8.0 mos (p<0.0001). Causes of death were similar between groups: disease progression (PD)(87%), toxicity(11.5%)(p=0.17). Demographics and disease characteristics: Median age (122 pts) was 62 yrs (range 54–67); 58% male; MM subtypes: IgG 58%, IgA 20%, light chain only 19%. Most pts had received prior transplant (81%) and thalidomide (70%), without difference between the 2 groups. Comparison of baseline labs between Groups 1 and 2 identified significant differences in hemoglobin (median 110 vs 104g/L, p=0.002), platelet count (median 196 vs 126/uL, p=0.0005), LDH (median 165 vs 234 U/L, p<0.0001), respectively. Treatment and toxicity: The median number of lenalidomide cycles received were 18(12–40) for Group 1; 4(1–10) for Group 2. Although the number of pts requiring dose reductions was similar between groups (32% Group 1, 25% Group 2, p=0.5), Group 1 pts did not require dose reductions until significantly later (median cycle 8.5 vs 2.5, p<0.0001). Cytopenias were the major cause of dose reductions in all pts (67.6%), most due to thrombocytopenia. The higher baseline platelet counts in Group 1 may reflect greater marrow reserve, delaying the onset of drug-related thrombocytopenia. Thrombocytopenia did not, however, lead to differences in increased drug discontinuation between groups: PD (70% vs 74%), toxicity (14% vs17%)(p=0.4). Responses: More pts who were able to stay on lenalidomide longer (Group 1) vs those who discontinued early (Group 2) achieved a response to therapy (95% vs 55%, p<0.0001). In addition, more pts in Group 1 were able to stay on therapy longer to achieve a VGPR/CR (43% vs 9.5%, p<0.0001). Time to best response was accordingly prolonged in Group 1 vs Group 2 (5.7 cycles vs 1.8 cycles, p<0.0001). Conclusions: 1) Relapsed/refractory MM pts receiving lenalidomide therapy for longer than 12 cycles have improved PFS and OS over those with shorter exposures. 2) Longer duration on therapy may be necessary to achieve optimal rates of both overall response and quality of response. 3) Lower baseline platelet counts and dose-reductions for thrombocytopenia during therapy were more common in pts who discontinued therapy early and may contribute to earlier disease progression. 4) Approaches to allow prolongation of lenalidomide exposure in MM by minimizing early dose reductions for thrombocytopenia should be further evaluated. Such approaches may include lowered-dose lenalidomide combinations taking care to use platelet-sparing agents or supportive care with thrombopoeitin agonists. Disclosures: Reece: Celgene: Honoraria, Research Funding. Trudel:Celgene: Honoraria, Research Funding. Kukreti:Celgene: Honoraria. Chen:Celgene: Honoraria, Research Funding.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Webber, Margareta"

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Weber, Elena Rebecca Margarita [Verfasser], and Ioannis [Akademischer Betreuer] Mylonas. "Klonierung, Expression und subzelluläre Lokalisation zweier tumorassoziierter Gene – CRIP1 und LDOC1 / Elena Rebecca Margarita Weber ; Betreuer: Ioannis Mylonas." München : Universitätsbibliothek der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, 2018. http://d-nb.info/1159506507/34.

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Schüller, Katharina [Verfasser], Borwin [Akademischer Betreuer] Bandelow, Martin [Gutachter] Weber, and Margarete [Gutachter] Schön. "Mean Age and Gender Distribution of Patients with Mental Disorders in Randomized Controlled Studies / Katharina Schüller ; Gutachter: Martin Weber, Margarete Schön ; Betreuer: Borwin Bandelow." Göttingen : Niedersächsische Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Göttingen, 2019. http://d-nb.info/1187520187/34.

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Hoffmann, Luisa Margarita [Verfasser], Jens [Akademischer Betreuer] Schmidt, Martin [Akademischer Betreuer] Weber, and Martin [Akademischer Betreuer] Oppermann. "B-Zell-Pathomechanismen der akuten und chronischen Myositis: Ex-Vivo- und In-Vitro-Untersuchungen / Luisa Margarita Hoffmann. Gutachter: Jens Schmidt ; Martin Weber ; Martin Oppermann. Betreuer: Jens Schmidt." Göttingen : Niedersächsische Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Göttingen, 2014. http://d-nb.info/1051132444/34.

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Van, Note Beverly Marshall. "Performing Women’s Speech in Early Modern Drama: Troubling Silence, Complicating Voice." Thesis, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2010-08-8327.

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This dissertation attempts to fill a void in early modern English drama studies by offering an in-depth, cross-gendered comparative study emphasizing representations of women’s discursive agency. Such an examination contributes to the continuing critical discussion regarding the nature and extent of women’s potential agency as speakers and writers in the period and also to recent attempts to integrate the few surviving dramas by women into the larger, male-dominated dramatic tradition. Because statements about the nature of women’s speech in the period were overwhelmingly male, I begin by establishing the richness and variety of women’s attitudes toward marriage and toward their speech relative to marriage through an examination of their first-person writings. A reassessment of the dominant paradigms of the shrew and the silent woman as presented in male-authored popular drama—including The Taming of the Shrew and Epicene—follows. Although these stereotypes are not without ambiguity, they nevertheless considerably flatten the contours of the historical patterns discernable in women’s lifewriting. As a result, female spectators may have experienced greater cognitive dissonance in reaction to the portrayals of women by boy actors. In spite of this, however, they may have borrowed freely from the occasional glimpses of newly emergent views of women readily available in the theater for their own everyday performances, as I argue in a discussion of The Shoemaker’s Holiday and The Roaring Girl. Close, cross-gendered comparison of two sets of similarly-themed plays follows: The Duchess of Malfi and The Tragedy of Mariam, and A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Love’s Victory. Here my examination reveals that the female writers’ critique of prevailing gender norms is more thorough than the male writers’ and that the emphasis on female characters’ material bodies, particularly their voices, registers the female dramatists’ dissatisfaction with the disfiguring representations of women on the maledominated professional stage. I end with a discussion of several plays by women—The Concealed Fancies, The Convent of Pleasure, and Bell in Campo—to illustrate the various revisions of marriage offered by each through their emphasis on gendered performance and, further, to suggest the importance of the woman writer’s contribution to the continuing dialectic about the nature of women and their speech.
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Books on the topic "Webber, Margareta"

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Barranger, Milly S. Margaret Webster: A bio-bibliography. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press, 1994.

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S, Barranger Milly, ed. Margaret Webster: A life in the theater. Ann Arbor, Mich: University of Michigan Press, 2004.

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Barranger, Milly S. Margaret Webster: A Life in the Theater. University of Michigan Press, 2010.

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Backes, Uwe, Alexander Gallus, Eckhard Jesse, and Tom Thieme, eds. Jahrbuch Extremismus & Demokratie (E & D). Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783748911555.

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Das Jahrbuch „Extremismus & Demokratie“ fördert die wissenschaftliche Beschäftigung mit dem Problemkreis des politischen Extremismus in seinen verschiedenen Ausprägungen. Es versteht sich als Diskussionsforum, Nachschlagewerk und Orientierungshilfe zugleich. Der 32. Band dokumentiert, kommentiert und analysiert umfassend die Entwicklung im Berichtsjahr 2019. Aktuelle Schwerpunkte bilden u. a. die Auseinandersetzung mit dem Hufeisenmodell und dem Gebot der Äquidistanz, die linkspopulistische Bewegung #aufstehen, die Autonomiebestrebungen in Schottland, der Islamische Staat, die linksextremistische Interventionistische Linke, eine aktuelle Untersuchung der rechtsextremistischen und rechtsterroristischen Akteure in Deutschland sowie eine Ursachsenanalyse der Radikalisierung von Islamisten. Neben Analysen, Daten und Dokumenten findet sich ein umfassender Literaturteil mit Rezensionen der wichtigsten Publikationen zu Fragen von Extremismus und Demokratie in Geschichte und Gegenwart. Mit Beiträgen von Alexander Akel, Uwe Backes, Dirk Baehr, Manuel Becker, Harald Bergsdorf , Klaus von Beyme, Evelyn Bokler-Völkel, Marcel Boldorf, Wilfried von Bredow, Stefan Breuer, Hubertus Buchstein, Juliane Clegg, Philipp Currle, Frank Decker, Norman Domeier, Jost Dülffer, Kristin Eichhorn, Alexander Gallus, Phillipp Gassert, Michael Gehler, Birgit Glorius, Stefan Goertz, Sebastian Gräfe, Bernd Greiner, Katrin Groh, Florian Grotz, Thomas Grumke, Anna-Maria Haase, Jens Hacke, Stephan Hilsberg, Kai Hirschmann, Lukas Hämisch, Thomas Jäger, Helge F. Jani, Hans-Gerd Jaschke, Eckhard Jesse, Ralph Jessen, Thomas Kern, Ilko-Sascha Kowalczuk, Wolfgang Kraushaar, Jakob Kullik, Jürgen P. Lang, Oliver W. Lembcke, Sebastian Liebold, Josefa Loebell, Tom Mannewitz, Miroslav Mareš, Julian Meinelt, Tilman Mayer, Reinhard Mehring, Lazaros Miliopoulos, Werner Müller, Helmut Müller-Enbergs, Herfried Münkler, Beate Neuss, Paul Nolte, Robert Chr. van Ooyen, Torsten Oppelland, Isabelle-Christine Panreck, Anton Pelinka, Armin Pfahl-Traughber, Gert Pickel, Jürgen Plöhn, Kim C. Priemel, Robert Radu, Claudia Ritzi, Gabriel Rolfes, Philp Rosin, Martin Sabrow, Kurt Schilde, Christine Schirrmacher, Mike Schmeitzner, Brigitte Seebacher, Daniel Siemens, Grit Straßenberger, Martina Steber, Roland Sturm, Tom Thieme, Hendrik Thoß, Margarete Tiessen, Heike Tuchscheerer, Daniela Weber, Manès Weisskircher, Bernd Jürgen Wendt, Nikolaus Werz, Gerhard Wettig, Benedikt Wintgens, Sandra Wirth und Samuel Zeitlin.
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5

Drama for Students: Presenting Analysis, Context and Criticism on Commonly Studied Dramas (Drama for Students). Thomson Gale, 1998.

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Drama for Students: Presenting Analysis, Context and Critism on Commonly Studied Dramas (Drama for Students). Thomson Gale, 1999.

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Drama for Students: Presenting Analysis, Context and Criticism on Commonly Studied Dramas (Drama for Students) Volume 4. Thomson Gale, 1998.

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Book chapters on the topic "Webber, Margareta"

1

Sawyer, Robert. "Paul Robeson, Margaret Webster, and their transnational Othello." In The Routledge Handbook of Shakespeare and Global Appropriation, 323–33. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315168968-29.

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Livesey, Ruth. "Soundscapes of the city in Margaret Harkness, A City Girl (1887), Henry James, The Princess Casamassima (1885–86), and Katharine Buildings, Whitechapel." In Margaret Harkness, 111–29. Manchester University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.7228/manchester/9781526123503.003.0007.

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This chapter explores Harkness’s first novel in the context of socialist fiction and the future of the modern novel in the 1880s. A City Girl pivots on one of the staple formulae of earlier nineteenth-century domestic melodrama and its radical political possibilities: a cross-class romantic relationship in which a working-class girl is seduced and abandoned by a gentleman. Unpicking how this novel reworks the inherited forms of radical melodrama helps to shed new light on Friedrich Engels’s famous critique of the work’s relation to realism and the status of literary naturalism in 1880s Britain. The Princess Casamassima – Henry James’s self-consciously experimental foray into naturalism and the political activism of 1880s London – serves as a counterpoint to illustrate the pressure of representation in the modernity of late Victorian mass culture. The chapter ends by returning to Katharine Buildings, Whitechapel, and Harkness’s time spent there researching A City Girl. Drawing on the correspondence and record books of Ella Pycroft, the resident lady rent collector, and Harkness’s cousin Beatrice Potter Webb, this chapter presents a counter-narrative that suggests how the residents themselves tried to write back their own life stories against an interpretative community of social activists, philanthropists, novelists, and political agents.
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Murnaghan, Sheila, and Deborah H. Roberts. "The Forecast is Hurricane." In Homer's Daughters, 193–210. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198802587.003.0011.

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Along with its heroine Penelope, the Odyssey presents an array of ‘other women’, female figures such as the Sirens, Calypso, and Circe, who impede Odysseus’ progress and stand as rivals to Penelope, but who cannot prevent Odysseus’ return to his much-prized wife. In this chapter, we consider the legacy of these figures, and especially of Circe, in poems by modern and contemporary female writers, including Margaret Atwood, H.D., Carol Ann Duffy, Louise Glück, Linda Pastan, and Augusta Davies Webster. While these authors may differ in their stances towards feminist politics and efforts to define a feminist poetics, their choice to speak through mythical figures who have considerable powers but are ultimately sidelined and abandoned yields searching, often sharply critical accounts of ancient and modern gender arrangements.
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"Margaret Friedman speaks about the assassination of her partner, Dr David Webster, and her search for his killers, 1989." In South Africa, 211–14. Third edition. | New York : Routledge, 2016. |: Routledge, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315621562-32.

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