2,059 research outputs found

    Memorandum to Colonel W. L. Magill, Jr. Provost Marshal and Director of Evacuation

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    Memorandum to the Colonel W.L. Magill Jr., Provost Marshal and Director of Evacuation presumably from a committee with the following members: Galen M. Fisher, Gordon Chapman, C. A. Richardson, and F. H. Smith. The memo includes the following subtitles: General Purpose and General Considerations.The Bishop James Chamberlain Baker Collection includes letters, documents, and articles about Japanese Americans during World War II. Subjects in the collection include Japanese Americans mass removal, Pearl Harbor and the aftermath, religion, and support from the non-Japanese American community. The collection was digitized and made accessible online by CSUDH Gerth Archives and Special Collections

    Steve Stockton & Father Martin Magill

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    Rev. Steve Stockton and Fr. Martin Magill share their story speak on the importance of peacemaking and reconciliation in the places you live. Rev Steve Stockton is minister of Fitzroy Presbyterian Church in Belfast (winners of the Pax Christi Peace Prize) and is author of Walk On; The Spiritual Journey of U2 and is a daily blogger at Soul Surmise where he writes about Art, faith and social justice. Fr Martin Magill is the priest of Sacred Heart Parish in Belfast and studied his Masters Degree in Ecumenism in Rome. The two of them met for a coffee and it changed their lives. A friendship developed that has over more coffee led to the founding of the acclaimed 4 Corners Festival and to the two of them being invited to the Sinn Fein party conference to address that party on Peace and Reconciliation. They have become very much a double act in modeling and working for peace in Ireland. They have also been involved in various peace talks with other international situations

    Memo sent to Mr. Neustadt from Colonel W. F. Magill, Jr., Provost Marshal Western Defense Command and Fourth Army, April 4, 1942

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    A memo sent to Mr. Neustadt from Colonel W. F. Magill, Jr. regarding travel during non-curfew hours. Proclamation No. 3 restricted what travel was permissible by German, Italian, and Japanese aliens in Military Area No. 1. The memo was posted by Karl R. Bendetsen, Assistant Chief of Staff, Civil Affairs Division, for the reference of all C. A. D. and Wartime Civil Control Administration staff.The War Relocation Authority (WRA), together with the Wartime Civil Control Administration (WCCA), the Civil Affairs Division (CAD) and the Office of the Commanding General (OFG) of the Western Defense Command (WDC) operated together to segregate and house some 110,000 men women and children from 1942 to 1945. The collection contains documents and photographs relating to the establishment and administrative workings of the (WDC), the (WRA) and the (WCCA) for the year 1942

    Summons of Magill Lopez to court

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    Summons to Magill Lopez regarding the camplaint against him by Edward Hoffman. Written and signed by Joseph Nangle, Alcalde of County of Santa Fe. Note on the reverse regarding the execution of the summons, written and signed by John L. Hamilton. Document in English, 1 pp/fr, two pages per frame. Court, legal, law enforcement

    Porter v Magill [2001] UKHL 67, House of Lords

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    Essential Cases: Public Law provides a bridge between course textbooks and key case judgments. This case document summarizes the facts and decision in Porter v Magill [2001] UKHL 67, House of Lords. The document also includes supporting commentary from author Thomas Webb.</p

    Fragment of a letter, possibly to Boatwright, from a J. W. Magill, referring to ammunition, no date

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    This is a fragment of a letter, possibly to Boatwright, from a J. W. Magill, referring to ammunition, no date

    John L. Boatwright Letters, MSS.1645

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    Abstract: Twelve letters from John L. Boatwright, Confederate Army ordnance office, to his wife, December 22, 1863-May 14, 1864.Scope and Content Note: This collection consists of twelve letters from Boatwright, an Ordinance officer in the Confederate Army, stationed at Savannah, Georgia, to his wife in Columbia, South Carolina, although the letters suggest that the Boatwrights were from Virginia. The earliest letter is dated December 22, 1863, the last May 14, 1864. The contents are largely personal; Boatwright was deeply devoted to his wife and in virtually every letter states how much he misses her. The strain of separation was doubtless increased by Mrs. Boatwright's pregnancy (see in particular letter of May 1, 1864). Occasionally Boatwright mentions the situation at Savannah and the course of the war; on April 26, 1864, for example, he alludes to the Army's financial straits. The letter of the following day states that "we are making the grandest of efforts in the world to frustrate the plans of the Yankees this spring" and that "Every Regiment from this place except one has been ordered to the front." There is also a fragment of a letter, possibly to Boatwright, from a J. W. Magill, referring to ammunition, no date.Biographical/Historical Note: Confederate Army ordnance office stationed in Savannah, Georgia at the time these letters were written, 1863-64

    Vanadium(III)-alpha-Amino Acid Homoleptic Complexes from Non-Protic Solutions: Reactions of [V(Mes)3(THF)] with alpha-Amino Acids and the Structures of tris(L-prolinato)vanadium-Dimethyl Sulfoxide and Tris(D-prolinato)vanadium-Dimethyl Sulfoxide

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    The reaction of [V(Mes)3(THF)] [Mes ≡ 2,4,6-Me3C6H2] with free α-amino acids in non-protic solvents led to the synthesis of homoleptic mononuclear hexacoordinate vanadium(III) complexes VA3 [AH = L-proline, 1; AH = D-proline, 2; AH = L-phenylalanine, 3; AH = D-phenylalanine, 4; AH = D,L-phenylalanine, 5; AH = L-tryptophan, 6; AH = L-valine, 7]. The solubility of the products varies according to the nature of the amino acid. The crystalline solids contain solvents of crystallization. The structures of 1·DMSO and 2·DMSO have been elucidated by an X-ray analysis. The configuration of 1 corresponds to the mer Δ diastereoisomeric form which is one of the four possible distereoisomers of the tris(L-prolinato)vanadium complex, while the configuration of 2 is the mer A form which is one of the four diastereoisomers of tris(D-prolinato)vanadium(III). The optical rotations of all complexes are very high when compared with those for uncomplexed α-amino acids ([α]D20 = 312° for 1 vs −85.0° for L-proline; −318° for 2 vs +81.5° for D-proline), the sign of the rotation for 1 being opposite to that seen for complexes 3, 6, and 7. Crystallographic details: 1 is monoclinic, space group P21, a = 10.468(9) Å, b = 19.125(6) Å, c = 11.448(4) Å, α = γ = 90°, β = 109.27(4)°, Z = 4, R = 0.043; 2 is monoclinic, space group P21, a = 10.486(2) Å b = 19.130(3) Å, c = 11.470(2) Å, α = γ = 90°, β = 109.31(2)°, Z = 4, R = 0.040

    Iron(II)-alpha-Amino Acid Complexes from Nonprotic Solutions: Reactions of [Fe(Mes)2(phen)] with alpha-Amino Acids and the Structures of Bis(l-Prolinato)(1,10-phenanthroline)iron(II) and Bis(d-prolinato)(1,10-phenanthroline)iron(II)

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    The arylation of FeCl2(THF)1.5 in THF with MesMgBr (Mes = 1,3,5-Me3C6H2) in the presence of 9,10-phenanthroline (phen) led to the crystalline [Fe(phen)(Mes)2], 1, which contains a tetrahedral iron(II) sigma-bonded to two aryl groups. They can be removed by a variety of protic ligands under aprotic conditions. The reaction of 1 with amino acids AH led to the isolation of monomeric iron(II)-amino acid complexes [Fe(phen)(A)2] [A = L-prolinato (2), D-prolinato (3), L-phenylalaninato (4), D-phenylalaninato (5), DL-phenylalaninato (6), L-tryptophanato (7), L-Valinato (8)]. They show a diversity in solubility depending on the amino acid residue. All of them have been fully characterized including the X-ray analysis on 2 and 3, which have been shown to be enantiomeric forms. Crystallographic details: 1 is monoclinic, space group I2/a, with a = 13.216(3) angstrom, b = 14.843(3) angstrom, c = 15.904(3) angstrom, alpha = gamma = 90-degrees, beta = 102.32(2)degrees, Z = 4, and R = 0.044. 2 is hexagonal, space group P3(1)21, with a = b = 9.663(2) angstrom, c = 23.743(4) angstrom, alpha = beta = 90-degrees, gamma = 120-degrees, Z = 3, and R = 0.035. 3 is hexagonal, space group P3(2)21, with a = b = 9.692(1) angstrom, c = 23.841(3) angstrom, alpha = beta = 90-degrees, gamma = 120-degrees, Z = 3, and R = 0.053

    Existence of pseudo-equilibria in a financial economy

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    This paper proves the existence of a pseudo-equilibrium in a financial economy with incomplete markets in which the agents may have nonordered preferences. We will use a fixed-point-like theorem of [4] that generalizes the results by Hirsch, Magill, Mas-Colell [18] and Husseini, Lasry, Magill [19] to encompass the framework considered by Gale and Mas-Colell ([14],[15]).Pseudo-equilibrium, incomplete markets, nonordered preferences, fixed-point-like theorems, Grassmann manifold.
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