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    Dunphy, Nathan J.

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    Carte de Visite of Private Nathan J. Dunphy, 11th Maine Infantry, Company H; From the MacDonald Collectionhttps://digitalmaine.com/arc_civilwarportraits/2108/thumbnail.jp

    Dunphy, Nathan J.

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    Carte de Visite of Private Nathan J. Dunphy, 11th Maine Infantry, Company H; From the MacDonald Collectionhttps://digitalmaine.com/arc_civilwarportraits/2108/thumbnail.jp

    Pseudoproxies for the paper "A pseudoproxy assessment of data assimilation for reconstructing the atmosphere–ocean dynamics of hydroclimate extremes"

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    <p>Pseudoproxies for the paper “A pseudoproxy assessment of data assimilation for reconstructing the atmosphere–ocean dynamics of hydroclimate extremes” by Steiger and Smerdon 2017.</p> <p>If you have further questions, address them to the author Nathan J. Steiger.</p&gt

    Nathan J. Fullmer, Saving the legacy: an oral history of Utah\u27s World War II veterans, ACCN 2070, American West Center, University of Utah

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    Transcript (34 pages) of an interview by Luke Kelly with Nathan J. Fullmer on August 2, 2001. This is from tape number 282 in the "Saving the Legacy Oral History ProjectFullmer (b. 1925) discusses serving with the 69th Infantry Division, in Company C of the 272nd Infantry Regiment (the so-called "Battle Axe" Regiment.") He was assigned to a 12-man rifle squad and classified as a sharpshooter. By the time he boarded a troop ship headed for England he was a PFC. He describes moving through Germany with his regiment, being on patrol, and meeting up with the Russian army at the Elbe River. After V-E day he was transferred into Ordnance, where he was responsible for captured enemy material. Fullmer returned home on the Santa Maria, and was discharged as a Staff Sergeant. 34 pages

    Oral History Interview: Nathan J. Smith (0664)

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    UW tent colony; Undergraduate education at UW; UW Medical School; Pediatrics at Boston Children's Hospital; Employment at UW Medical School; Department of Surgery controversy; Retirement; E.B. Fred; Medical School's service to the state of Wisconsin

    Global extent of chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium vivax

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    I wish to thank Ric Price and colleagues1 for highlighting the under-studied chloroquine resistance in Plasmodium vivax in their systematic review and meta-analysis. However, I would question their study inclusion criteria: the primary outcome was “the risk of recurrent P vivax parasitaemia at day 28” when table 1 lists four studies with follow-up periods of less than 27 days. I would also suggest that it seems a shame that two author-reviewers, independently, did not extract and analyse the studies and data for inclusion, as seems standard practice for good systematic reviews. 2 Lastly, although the paper underlines the extent and importance of chloroquine-resistant P vivax, I am none the wiser on what management I should offer in practice to patients from different areas given the prevalence of resistance.I declare no competing interests.<br/
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