931,402 research outputs found
Frances Haynes.
Fannie came to Australia from London, England, with her sister Emily on the ship Merkara. The sisters were classed as 'free passengers' and listed as domestic servants in 1891. Four years later, Fannie was among the first 82 women who enrolled to vote in the Northern Territory. Fannie was married three times. With her first husband, Michael Ryan Cody, she travelled to Wandi, Northern Territory and opened a hessian store to take advantage of the boom goldfield town. Michael died at Wandi in 1897. Fannie then married Thomas George Crush at the Registry Office, Wandi on the 3 August 1898. Fannie and Tom moved to the mining community of Brock's Creek where they built the Federation Hotel, which was officially opened in 1900. Three years later Tom died of heart failure. Fannie's third marriage was to Henry Haynes, a grazier. Fannie owned and managed the Federation Hotel until the Second World War arrived in Darwin and she was evacuated to Sydney to live with her sister. Fannie died in Sydney in 1945.PublicanEnglis
Haynes Stellite Company
Haynes Stellite Company was incorporated in 1915. The original work force consisted of 4 family members with Haynes as plant manager and furnace man. The company produced 3 grades of tool metal alloys using 16 tiny gas furnaces. Over the course of the next year revenues for STELLITE® alloy exceeded 3,600,000. The reason was WWI and the demand for lathe cutting tools.Use of this image is restricted to projects related to Destination Indiana. IHS may not reproduce.Destination Indiana - Haynes International, a Century of Innovatio
Leo Haynes interview, tape 1
Leo Haynes was born February 24, 1917 in Boulder, Colorado and moved to Spokane, Washington in 1922. Haynes graduated from Rodgers High School in 1935 and worked for the Civilian Conservation Corps for one year and Montgomery Ward until the start of World War II. During World War II, Haynes served in the Army Air Corps as a navigator on a B-17. Haynes and his crew were assigned to the 390th bomb group in the European Theater. After the War, Haynes ran a grocery store in Spokane County and ran an upholstery operation and retired in 1981. Haynes married a woman named Marie prior to World War II. He died March 14, 2004 in El Dorado, Kansas
The Haynes "Light Six" Open Car, 1918
Having progressed 25 years in the auto business, the Haynes models of 1918 appear more advanced, diverse in design, and popularly promoted, as seen in this advertisement touting the latest features and advantages to drivers.Howard County Journe
Mechanistic Investigations into the Palladium-Catalyzed Decarboxylative Allylic Alkylation of Ketone Enolates Using the PHOX Ligand Architecture
Palladium-catalyzed asymmetric allylic alkylation has become a large and important field for chemical synthesis. Many methodologies in this field offer mild conditions under which challenging and important molecular features can be reliably synthesized, including chiral all-carbon quaternary stereocenters. As a result, palladium- catalyzed asymmetric allylic alkylation has found significant use in total synthesis, and growing use in industry. While the general process of palladium-catalyzed asymmetric allylic alkylation has been studied for decades, there have been a number of recent modifications and developments, such as asymmetric versions of decarboxylative allylic alkylation procedures that are not yet well understood. The development of future implementations and improvements to palladium-catalyzed asymmetric allylic alkylation and related methodologies is expected to be facilitated by a better understanding of these more recent developments, and thus further mechanistic investigation is warranted.
Reported herein is a set of investigations into the palladium-catalyzed decarboxylative asymmetric allylic alkylation of ketone enolates using the PHOX ligand architecture. By monitoring the reaction via 31P NMR, a series of previously unidentified key intermediates is discovered. Two representatives of these key intermediates are isolated and characterized. The solution behavior of these species under reaction-like conditions is studied along with a few novel and related complexes. The role of these intermediates and their impact on the behavior of the reaction and product formation is discussed. Previously confounding experimentally observed behavior for this methodology is rationalized via the properties elucidated for these discovered intermediates.</p
Haynes, Melvina. Interview about early life in Port Union.
Transcript and digitized audio recording from a collection belonging to the Sir William F. Coaker Heritage Foundation. Haynes reflects on growing up in Port Union, including specific memories about school and children's activities such as Pitching Buttons and Hoist Your Sails and Run
Building by J. P. Haynes, Contractor
This book contains photographs and illustrations of commerical buildings, churches, and factories that J. F. Haynes served as contractor. All buildings are in San Antonio, Texas
Flower Garden quilt, by Aenes Haynes
Image of Flower Garden quilt created in 1920s by Aenes Haynes. Also includes questionnaires describing the quilt completed by Mrs. Livingston as part of the Utah Quilt Guild\u27s documentation days held from 1988-1994. She inherited the quilt from her mother in 197
Pseudoradiarctia Haynes
Pseudoradiarctia Haynes gen. n. Type species: Diacrisia rhodesiana Hampson, 1900, by present designation. Diagnosis. This new genus can be clearly distinguished from Radiarctia by the characteristic long narrow valvae, divided juxta with anteriorly extended processes, and the lack of foretibial spines. It can be separated from Binna by a well developed saccus, flat ribbon-like valvae, narrow and basally constricted uncus, and a juxta bearing two terminally extended narrow processes. In Binna, the valvae are tube-like section, the uncus is robust and without constriction, the juxta lacks the addition of terminally projecting processes, and the saccus is very weak and almost indiscernible. Unlike Binna, Pseudoradiarctia does not possess a club-like process arising from the base and ventral edge of the valva. Description. Head orange or orange-brown; more orange dorsolaterally. Nuchal fringe orange. Palp orange or yellow medially, brown laterally. Antenna bipectinate with the longest pectination approximately half the diameter of the eye. Thorax buff-grey or grey-brown with orange or buff-orange fringes on the tegulae and patagia. Forecoxa approximately 0.75 length of femur and equal in width. Epiphysis approximately 0.6 length of tibia. Foretibia without spines; middle tibia with one pair of spines; hind tibia with two pairs of spines. Forewings pale buff, orange, or deep orange brown in Pseudoradiarctia scita. Interneural patches pale grey to dark brown filling most spaces to a lesser or greater degree and totally in scita. Hindwings paler than the forewings but with darker veins and fringes. In scita the hindwings are much darker with the veins and fringes appearing lighter. Abdomen pale or dark orange dorsally with or without a row of black spots or dashes; laterally with black spots; ventrally orange, buff-orange or buff-grey. Male genitalia: Posterior margin of eighth tergite lightly sinuate or concave. Eighth sternum with a small medial sclerite and wide and rounded lateral sclerites. Pair of well developed coremata present. Saccus moderately deep but well developed. Valva long, thin and moderately arcuate or s-shaped; with or without a medially directed triangular-like dorsolateral process arising from the dorsal edge of the valva. Juxta wide and occasionally incised basally; terminally extended into two short or long narrow extensions. Transtila arms short and weak. Uncus long, narrow, basal half noticeably constricted then widening to two small apposed lobes, and tapering to a hooked apex. Aedeagus slightly curved; vesica finely scobinate and without spines or cornuti.Published as part of Haynes, Patrick G., 2011, A review of some of the Binna- like species of Afrotropical Spilosoma Curtis (1825) listed by Goodger & Watson (1995) and including the genus Radiarctia Dubatolov (2006) (Lepidoptera: Arctiidae, Arctiinae), pp. 22-36 in Zootaxa 2811 on page 25, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.27713
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