172,923 research outputs found
Letter from CEM to Adam Johnston, 1856
Adam Johnston's account from Oct. 13, 1849 to Apr. 13, 1852 have been received and referred to the 2d Auditor. Wm. H. Johnston enquires to Adam Johnston's account
Lydia H. Hart Diary
Diary, 1823-1830, 1875 and loose papers 1813, 1831, and undated of Lydia H. Hart of Richmond, Virginia and later Walden, Orange County, New York. The Diary was started by Lydia H. Hart, the wife of Reverend William H. Hart, who was the rector of St. John’s Church in Richmond, VA and later St. Andrews Church in Walden, New York. Diary entries include day-to-day activities and meetings with local neighbors and church patron’s. These neighbors included Elizabeth Van Lew and her parents, which Lydia Hart writes about several times. Most dated entries also include discussion of specific bible verses or Rev. Hart’s sermons. Notable entries include a description of the funeral service for Rev. John Buchanan, former rector of St. John’s Church from 1795 to 1822. Diary entries are chronological and more frequent for 1823 and become less frequent in 1823. In 1828, Lydia Hart moved to New York and eventually to Walden, New York in May 1830.At the end of the diary entries is an entry form another author, possibly by Mary. W. Hart dated 1875. Lydia Hart died in 1831 and could not have made the entry.At the back of the diary and upside down to the diary entries are transcriptions of letters and poems of Lydia Hart’s to various newspapers and and personnel correspondence. Entries include a plea for support to the city of Richmond to take care of its ‘destitute children’, letters to the editor of local newspapers, and poems for the birth of a child or death of a patron.Loose papers include a letter dated Jan 8th 1813, a bequeath request from William H. Hart for the placement of a Tombstone for Lydia Hart, a table of contents for various letters or sermons, a letter from William Hart to a friend from Richmond, and 2 loose undated papers of unknown authorship. The letter from William Hart speaks of the events of Lydia’s death, and inquiries about events taking place in Richmond
Adam H. Whetstone diary, W.0080
Abstract: Contains the diary of Confederate soldier Adam H. Whetstone of Prattville, AlabamaScope and Content Note: Adam H. Whetstone, a member of the Fifty-third Alabama Regiment, wrote the entries in his diary between July 24, 1864, and his parole and return home on May 17, 1865. He described the regiment's movements through Georgia and South Carolina. With the exception of a narrow escape and a skirmish near Atlanta on November 9, 1864, there are few mentions of interaction with Union forces. Instead, many of Whetstone's diary entries describe the social excursions that he participated in with other soldiers. While Whetstone recorded little direct military action within his own regiment, he did discuss war-related news. Notable entries include Whetstone's reactions to the evacuation of Richmond and General Lee's surrender.The diary ends with a final update written on December 25, 1865, in which Whetstone reported the death of his only son. "Since the 17th of May I have wrote nothing, but have seen more trouble than in all my life before," Whetstone wrote.Biographical/Historical Note: Adam H. Whetstone was born on December 2, 1824, in Autauga County, Alabama. On June 10, 1842, he married Mary L. Huie and had three children. After her death, he married Mary L. Hine (1825-1895) and had three more children. During the Civil War, Whetstone served as a corporal in the Fifty-third Regiment of Alabama Partisan Rangers. Whetstone died on October 20, 1905
06 Adam H. Levin: "Spent Fuel Management at Exelon Nuclear"
Includes descriptive metadata provided by producer in MP3 file: "engineering - Parker Symposium - 06 Adam H. Levin: 'Spent Fuel Management at Exelon Nuclear.'" By Vanderbilt University. Composer is Regan Brown. Levin describes storage of spent nuclear fuel.School of Engineerin
Vorlesungen über die deutsche Wissenschaft und Literatur / Von Adam H. Müller
VORLESUNGEN ÜBER DIE DEUTSCHE WISSENSCHAFT UND LITERATUR / VON ADAM H. MÜLLER
Vorlesungen über die deutsche Wissenschaft und Literatur / Von Adam H. Müller (1)
Cover (1)
Programm (3)
Erste Vorlesung (5)
Zweyte Vorlesung (15)
Dritte Vorlesung (22)
Vierte Vorlesung (30)
Fünfte Vorlesung (38)
Sechste Vorlesung (45)
Siebente Vorlesung (53)
Achte Vorlesung (60)
Neunte Vorlesung (71)
Zehnte Vorlesung (80)
Eilfte Vorlesung (88)
Zwölfte Vorlesung (98
Bernadette Liou, Richard Adam, Réponse au compte rendu de J.-C. Dumont et H. Louette
Adam Richard, Liou Bernadette. Bernadette Liou, Richard Adam, Réponse au compte rendu de J.-C. Dumont et H. Louette. In: L'Information Grammaticale, N. 54, 1992. pp. 61-63
Contribution of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in Country’S H-Index
The aim of this study is to examine the effect of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) development on country’s scientific ranking as measured by H-index. Moreover, this study applies ICT development sub-indices including ICT Use, ICT Access and ICT skill to find the distinct effect of these sub-indices on country’s H-index. To this purpose, required data for the panel of 14 Middle East countries over the period 1995 to 2009 is collected. Findings of the current study show that ICT development increases the H-index of the sample countries. The results also indicate that ICT Use and ICT Skill sub-indices positively contribute to higher H-index but the effect of ICT access on country’s H-index is not clear
John Adam Street [Adelphi development]
Number 8 John Adam Street (Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce), detail, medallion; Adam House (7-10 John Adam Street) is part of the Adelphi development designed in 1768-1772 by brothers Robert and John Adam. In addition to individual town houses, Robert Adam engaged in a number of urban-planning schemes. He often introduced varied shapes, including squares, crescents and circuses, although his long terraces of juxtaposed houses or unified façades on the sides of a square were more common. For these, he took the principles of his individual town-house compositions and adapted them to large and more complex groupings, often applying the delicate ornamentation in Liardet’s cement. The grandest of Adam’s schemes was the Adelphi, built on leased land between the Strand and the Thames. He embanked the Thames, raising the Royal Terrace’s houses (destroyed) above vaulted warehouses that he hoped the Government would lease. For this, and for the rest of this H-shaped development, he employed his favourite decorative elements, but in a composition without an obvious central emphasis. Though aesthetically satisfying, the Adelphi was a failure financially for the brothers. Source: Grove Art Online; http://www.oxfordartonline.com/ (accessed 7/17/2010
Metal-free photoredox-catalysed formal C–H/C–H coupling of arenes enabled by interrupted Pummerer activation
Aryl–aryl cross-coupling constitutes one of the most widely used procedures for the synthesis of high-value materials that range from pharmaceuticals to organic electronics and conducting polymers. The assembly of (hetero)biaryl scaffolds generally requires multiple steps; coupling partners must be functionalized before the key bond-forming event is considered. The development of selective C–H arylation processes in arenes—which sidestep the need for prefunctionalized partners—is thus crucial for streamlining the construction of these key architectures. Here we report an expedient, one-pot assembly of (hetero)biaryl motifs using photocatalysis and two non-prefunctionalized arene partners. The approach is underpinned by the functionalization of a C–H bond in an arene coupling partner using the interrupted Pummerer reaction. A unique pairing of the organic photoredox catalyst and the intermediate dibenzothiophenium salts enables highly selective reduction in the presence of sensitive functionalities. The utility of the metal-free, one-pot strategy is exemplified by the synthesis of a bioactive natural product and the modification of complex molecules of societal importance.</p
Cloning, purification and characterisation of human and mouse ADAM 8 sheddase activity
Al-Riyami H. Cloning, purification and characterisation of human and mouse ADAM 8 sheddase activity. Bielefeld (Germany): Bielefeld University; 2006
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