133,110 research outputs found
Doyle, N R, WX952
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/382599Surname: DOYLE. Given Name(s) or Initials: N R. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: WX952. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 10076.213868
Item: [2016.0049.14892] "Doyle, N R, WX952
Reactivity and selectivity in intermolecular insertion reactions of chlorophenylcarbene
PT: J; CR: DOYLE MP, 1987, CHEM DIAZIRINES, CH8 DOYLE MP, 1987, J ORG CHEM, V52, P1619 GOULD IR, 1985, TETRAHEDRON, V41, P1587 GRAHAM WH, 1965, J AM CHEM SOC, V87, P4396 KIRMSE W, 1964, CARBENE CHEM MOSS RA, 1985, REACTIVE INTERMEDIAT, V3, CH3 MOSS RA, 1986, J AM CHEM SOC, V108, P7028 PADWA A, 1969, J ORG CHEM, V34, P2728 SEYFERTH D, 1967, J ORGANOMET CHEM, V7, P405 SEYFERTH D, 1968, J AM CHEM SOC, V90, P2944 SEYFERTH D, 1970, J ORG CHEM, V35, P1989 SEYFERTH D, 1973, J AM CHEM SOC, V75, P6763 SOUNDARARAJAN N, IN PRESS J AM CHEM S STANG PJ, 1987, J AM CHEM SOC, V109, P5019 STEINBECK K, 1978, TETRAHEDRON LETT, P1103 STEINBECK K, 1981, ANGEW CHEM INT EDIT, V20, P773; NR: 16; TC: 18; J9: TETRAHEDRON LETT; PG: 4; GA: R2217Source type: Electronic(1
Portrait of Zane Doyle.
Black and white photograph of Zane Doyle, developer of Brighton ski area,, taken in the 1960
Portrait of Zane Doyle.
Black and white photograph of Zane Doyle, developer of Brighton ski area, taken in the 1950
Activation parameters for the reaction of phenylchloro carbene with pyridine, tri- n -butyltin hydride, and triethylsilane; evidence against the need to invoke reversibly formed complexes in the reaction of this carbene with olefins
PT: J; CR: CALDIN EF, 1964, FAST REACTIONS SOLUT, CH1 DOYLE MP, UNPUB TETRAHEDRON LE GIESE B, 1978, ANGEW CHEM INT EDIT, V17, P595 GIESE B, 1980, ANGEW CHEM INT EDIT, V19, P835 GIESE B, 1980, LIEBIGS ANN CHEM, P725 GIESE B, 1981, CHEM BER, V114, P3306 GIESE B, 1982, ANGEW CHEM INT EDIT, V21, P310 GOULD IR, 1985, TETRAHEDRON, V41, P1587 HOUK KN, 1984, J AM CHEM SOC, V106, P4291 HOUK KN, 1984, J AM CHEM SOC, V106, P4293 HOUK KN, 1985, TETRAHEDRON, V41, P1555 JACKSON JE, 1988, IN PRESS J AM CHEM S, V110 MOSS RA, 1986, J AM CHEM SOC, V108, P7028 PLATZ MS, 1983, TETRAHEDRON LETT, V24, P4763 SCAIANO JC, 1988, CHEM KINETICS SMALL, P73 SKELL PS, 1969, J AM CHEM SOC, V91, P7131 SOUNDARARAJAN N, 1988, IN PRESS J AM CHEM S, V110 TURRO NJ, 1987, J AM CHEM SOC, V109, P4973 WEAST RC, 1970, HDB CHEM PHYSICS, F42 ZUGRAVESCU I, 1976, N YLID CHEM; NR: 20; TC: 36; J9: TETRAHEDRON LETT; PG: 4; GA: T9526Source type: Electronic(1
Doyle, J A (James Aloysius), Pasoeroean Jactra N E I
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/382582Surname: DOYLE. Given Name(s) or Initials: J A (JAMES ALOYSIUS). Military Service Number or Last Known Location: PASOEROEAN JACTRA N E I. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 51773.213851
Item: [2016.0049.14875] "Doyle, J A (James Aloysius), Pasoeroean Jactra N E I
Zane Doyle checking ski passes.
Black and white photo showing Zane Doyle checking ski passes at Brighton Ski Resort, taken in the 1970
The relationship between Ford, Kipling, Conan Doyle, Wells and British propaganda of the First World War
PhDThis thesis resituates the war-writing of Ford Madox Ford, Rudyard Kipling, Arthur
Conan Doyle and H.G. Wells in relation to official British propaganda
produced during the First World War. Examining these authors' institutional
connections with propaganda that was authorised by the British government locates
some of their texts within a network of materials that were deployed to justify
Britain's involvenlent in the war. The British government, via the War Propaganda
Bureau, approached major literary figures to assist in its plan to compete
vigorously with Germany to win American support. Positioning Ford's condemnation
of Prussian culture within this institutional context reveals that his officially
commissioned books functioned as a part of the larger yet-covert government
project to influence American intellectual opinion. Although wary that Kipling's
chauvinism might offend some readers, the British government reprinted and
distributed his denunciations of the 'Hun'. Kipling was given access to censored
letters from Indian soldiers in order to assist him in depicting the Imperial forces as
united. The result, The Eyes of Asia (1918), was a set of fictional texts by Indian
soldiers celebrating French and English civilisation in contrast to German barbarism.
In addition to official propaganda, these authors produced pro-war stories, poems, and
articles independent of direct government commission. Conan Doyle's formal call for
men to volunteer to defend their country, and his public denunciations of German
atrocities, were followed by his recruitment of Sherlock Holmes to repel a possible
German invasion ("His Last Bow" (1917)). Adding to his support for the war in his
journalism and war-time fiction, Wells was appointed the Head of Enemy Propaganda
for the newly formed Ministry of Information. He resigned almost immediately
following disagreements over government strategy. This project situates historically
and examines critically these authors' differing roles in relation to British propaganda
efforts during the First World War
Romania at the Intersection of Different Europes: Implications of a Pluri-Civilizational Encounter
In the chapter, it will be argued that in the case of Romania, it is rather
difficult to make sense of its historical trajectory if it is relegated to a singular and
homogenized civilizational background. Being firmly situated within the Eastern part of
Europe, it is deemed Balkan, South-Eastern, or simply Eastern European, and therefore its
national culture is deemed the outcome of a singular Eastern – Byzantine, Ottoman, and
Orthodox – civilizational experience. As the Romanian historian Andrei Pippidi points out,
one popular way of representing the Balkans as a historical and cultural unit (and Romania as
a part of it) is by seeing it as the result of successive Roman, Byzantine, and Ottoman rule
(Pippidi 1999: 97). Tom Gallagher, a well-known expert of Romanian politics, equates this
cumulative legacy with the ‘dead weight’ of the Romanian pre-modern ‘legacy of
backwardness’, which the 19th century liberals needed to face in their modernizational efforts
(Gallagher 2005: 18-19). Instead, Tony Judt defines the Romanian position by what it is not:
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Romania cannot be understood as part of Central Europe in that it cannot be regarded
“European”, at least not in the sense that one could perceive of Hungary or Slovenia as “fully
European” (Judt 2001). And Samuel Huntington differentiates the Romanian historical
trajectory by relegating Transylvania to Western Christian civilization while sub-Carpathian
Romania is considered part of the Orthodox Christian sphere (Huntington 1993: 30). The
(implicit) designation of (part of) Romania to a singular Byzantine/Orthodox/Ottoman
background tends to conflate the three civilizational legacies, to neglect what is distinct about
them, and to ignore how Romania has related to these legacies in specific ways over time
Lowell Thomas and Zane Doyle at Brighton.
Black and white photograph of Lowell Thomas and Zane Doyle at Brighton ski resort, Utah, taken in the 1950
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