6,999 research outputs found
Letter from Carl Hayden to Roy W. James and M. J. Hanley
Letter from Carl Hayden to Roy James and M. J. Hanley expressing a wish to soon have a definite answer in regards to their insurance claims
Roy Hoopes papers
Roy Hoopes (1922- ), author, journalist, photographer, and editor was born in Salt Lake City, Utah. However, he grew up in Washington, DC, where his family moved when he was four. After active duty in the Naval Reserves in WWII, he completed his M.A. in 1948 at George Washington University, where he had previously completed his A.B. in 1943. Thereafter he edited and wrote for various magazines such as National Geographic Magazine, Playboy, Modern Maturity, and Maryland, for which he wrote a regular series of articles on Maryland writers. In addition, Hoopes wrote a weekly newspaper column on current events for the Berkshire (MA) Eagle under the pseudonym Peter Potomac from 1957 to 1977. Hoopes was the author of more than thirty books. He was the official biographer of James M. Cain and Ralph Ingersoll as well as co-author of the biography of Mormon apostle Rudger Clawson, of whom he is a descendent. He has written works of fiction such as Our Man in Washington as well as many non-fiction books including When the Stars Went to War, Americans Remember the Home Front and The Peace Corps Experience. Hoopes took up photography in 1969 and provided his own photographs for his books and for many articles. This collection includes drafts of books and magazine articles, research for both published and unpublished articles and books, photographs, serials, correspondence, and original artwork by political cartoonists Richard M. Powers and Herblock. The collection is unprocessed, but a preliminary inventory is available
Regional integration fifty years after the treaty of Rome. The EU, Asia, Africa and the Americas.
The European Union has been the pioneer and undisputed
leader of regional integration processes. Since its inception in
the 1950s, following the Schuman Declaration that set in motion
Jean Monnet’s innovative idea to join together European coal
and steel industries, Europe has offered a useful model for
regional integration. Strengthened by the 1957 Treaty of Rome
(exactly half a century ago), this bold entity was later transformed
into the European Union by the Maastricht Treaty.
Having successfully accomplished its primary goal (“to make
war unthinkable and materially impossible”), the EU is currently
facing challenges associated with its expansion and the deepening
of its pooled sovereignty. On the other hand, the effects
of the EU in international relations are of paramount relevance.
While the forceful transposition of national and regional structures
into other regions is a historical error, the essence of the
EU as a model to be adapted by other regions is a viable
approach to enhance stability and welfare. In this regard, this
volume examines the current challenges of the EU and the perspectives
of regional integration in Africa, Asia and Latin
America
Letter from Tsuneo Iwata to Mayor Roy M. Day, April 16, 1942
Letter of gratitude from Tsuneo Iwata president of the Turlock Social Club to Mayor Roy M. Day of Turlock, California, in response to the mass removal in California.The Nisaburo Aibara Collection features materials from the Turlock Social Club, a local Japanese-American community group active between 1939 and 1970. It contains documents regarding the Stockton, Turlock and Merced Assembly Centers and Japanese American Citizens League chapters. The Collection also features correspondences with reactions, responses, and preparations for the forced evacuation. Additionally, the Collection has records on the Central California Cantaloupe Company, Turlock Farm Corporation, Turlock Japanese Society, and family records and funeral service programs of Japanese-American residents of Turlock
Jews and gender in British literature 1815-1865.
PhDThis thesis examines the variety of relationships between Jews and gender in early
to mid-nineteenth century British literature, focussing particularly on representations
of and by Jewish women. It reconstructs the social, political and literary context in
which writers produced images and narratives about Jews, and considers to what
extent stereotypes were reproduced, appropriated, or challenged. In particular it
examines the ways in which questions of gender were linked to ideas about religious
or racial difference in the Victorian period.
The study situates literary representations of Jews within the context of
contemporary debates about the participation of the Jews in the life of the modern
state. It also investigates the ways in which these political debates were gendered,
looking in particular at the relationship between the cultural construction of
femininity and English national identity.
It first considers Victorian culture's obsession with Rebecca, the Jewess created in
Walter Scott's influential novel Ivanhoe (1819). It examines Rebecca's refusal to
convert to Christianity in the context of Scott's discussion of racial separatism and
modern national unity.
Evangelical writers like Annie Webb, Amelia Bristow and Mrs Brendlah were
prolific literary producers, and preoccupied with converting Jewish women.
Particularly during the 18'40s and 1850s, evangelical writing provided an important
forum for the construction and consolidation of women's national identity.
Grace Aguilar's writing was an attempt to understand Jewish identity within the
terms of Victorian domestic ideology. In contrast, Celia and Marion Moss, in their
historical romances, offered narratives of female heroism and national liberation,
drawing on the contemporary debate about slavery.
Benjamin Disraeli's construction of a "tough version of Jewish identity was a
response both to the contemporary stereotype of the feminised Jew and to the debate
about Jewish emancipation. It also drew on the virile ideology of the Young England
movement of the 1840s
Cartographie thématique de corpus pour l'étude de métaphores conceptuelles
@inproceedings{CN-ROY-2005-2, author = {Thibault Roy and St{é}phane Ferrari and Pierre Beust}, title = {{Cartographie th{é}matique de corpus pour l'{é}tude de m{é}taphores conceptuelles}}, year = {2005}, booktitle = {Actes des 4{è}mes Journ{é}es de la Linguistique de Corpus}, editor = {G. Williams}, address = {Lorient, France}, organization = {15-17 septembre 2005} }National audienc
Land Lease [A] between Carson Estate Company and Roy Campbell, Green Acres Farm, 1944-1946
Describes one year lease agreement from April 15, 1944 to April 15, 1945 between Carson Estate Company and Green Acre Farms with yearly rent of $1180. Tract of land described in chains as units of measurement. Handwritten notes strike year dates and replace with the 1945 and 1946. Lease agreement precedes lease to Fred M. Kuwahara. Lease signed by Roy Campbell of Green Acre Farms with a Compton address
The diagonal tension resistance of structural lightweight concrete slabs
Static tests were conducted on twelve structural lightweight concrete slabs to investigate the diagonal tension resistance of these slabs. Eight of these slabs are similar to slabs tested previously by Moe. Four of the slabs approximate conditions near an interior column in the flat plate floor system which was the prototype for model tests conducted at the University of Illinois and at the Portland Cement Association laboratories. Three different lightweight aggregates were used in the study. Five slabs were instrumented with electrical resistance strain gages placed on the concrete near the column and at selected points on the steel reinforcement. For each increment of load, both strain and deflection measurements were made. The feasibility of extending Moe's work based on normal weight concrete was studied. Test results show good agreement with Moe's equation when the tensile strength parameter is taken to be f[subscript]sp instead of the square root of the compressive strength. The shear strength of the lightweight slabs tested is generally below that for corresponding normal weight slabs except for the four slabs which represent the slabs used in the model studies. These four slabs had shear strength approximately equal to that observed in the 3/4-scale model test at the Portland Cement Association laboratories
Discovery, Synthesis, and Optimization of Diarylisoxazole-3-carboxamides as Potent Inhibitors of the Mitochondrial Permeability Transition Pore
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Roy, S., Šileikytė, J., Schiavone, M., Neuenswander, B., Argenton, F., Aubé, J., … Schoenen, F. J. (2015). Discovery, Synthesis, and Optimization of Diarylisoxazole-3-carboxamides as Potent Inhibitors of the Mitochondrial Permeability Transition Pore. ChemMedChem, 10(10), 1655–1671. http://doi.org/10.1002/cmdc.201500284, which has been published in final form at doi.org/10.1002/cmdc.201500284. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Self-Archiving.The mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mtPTP) is a Ca2+-requiring mega-channel which, under pathological conditions, leads to the deregulated release of Ca2+ and mitochondrial dysfunction, ultimately resulting in cell death. Although the mtPTP is a potential therapeutic target for many human pathologies, its potential as a drug target is currently unrealized. Herein we describe an optimization effort initiated around hit 1, 5-(3-hydroxyphenyl)-N-(3,4,5-trimethoxyphenyl)isoxazole-3-carboxamide, which was found to possess promising inhibitory activity against mitochondrial swelling (EC50 100 µm). This enabled the construction of a series of picomolar mtPTP inhibitors that also potently increase the calcium retention capacity of the mitochondria. Finally, the therapeutic potential and in vivo efficacy of one of the most potent analogues, N-(3-chloro-2-methylphenyl)-5-(4-fluoro-3-hydroxyphenyl)isoxazole-3-carboxamide (60), was validated in a biologically relevant zebrafish model of collagen VI congenital muscular dystrophies
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