4,473 research outputs found
Speed of Publication of Statutes and Regulations in the United Kingdom, Canada, and the United States
Examines reasons for typical delays in publication of statutes & regulations in UK,US, & Canada. Finds US federal laws published more slowly because of time taken to add marginal notes after enactmen
Legal Citation Form: Theory and Practice
Sets forth 13 principles as a basis for a system of legal citation forms, and critically reviews various rules in the 13th edition of A Uniform System of Citation
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
My love is like a red red rose (Transcription)
Collected by Merlin Mitchell
Transcribed by Nathaniel Lucy
Sung by Stuart Wade
Fayetteville, Arkansas
December 16, 1950
Reel 72, Item 5
My Love is Like a Red Red Rose
Merlin Mitchell: This is Fayetteville, Arkansas Saturday the 16th of December. We are in the home of Mr. Stuart Wade, who is a music instructor at the University of Arkansas and has learned some folksongs that he accompanies himself to with a guitar. And he sings them in a very finished style and this will be a fine example in how the folk material can be raised to an artistic level. We are going to have him do two or three songs for us.
MM: This first song is “My Love is Like a Red Red Rose”
My love is like a red red rose
That’s newly sprung in June
My love is like a melody
That’s sweetly played in tune
My love is fair to see
Both true and fair is she
And though I roamed a thousand miles
My love she always will be
Oh who will shoe those pretty little feet
And who will glove those hands
And who will kiss those rosy lips
When I’m in that far off land
Your feet will go unshod
And your hand will not be gloved
And though I roamed a thousand miles
My love she always will b
Nathaniel Faulkhead
The author discusses the life of Nathaniel Faulkhead, who was Treasurer of the Echo Publishing House in Australia and a high ranking member of the Masonic Lodge
Normative reconstruction and social character of freedom in Axel Honneth
O presente objeto de pesquisa busca proceder ao estudo e identificação dos traços essenciais envolvidos na abordagem teórica das relações sociais e políticas trazidas na obra O Direito da Liberdade do filósofo alemão Axel Honneth. Faz-se uma análise da influência hegeliana sobre o conceito de liberdade, assim como dos fatores relacionados com o suprimento das carências subjetivas, mediadas pelas diferentes “esferas” sociais. Honneth, assim, procura trazer à tona a compreensão de um novo modelo de liberdade advindo da Filosofia do Direito de Hegel, o qual se distingue substancialmente dos modelos tradicionais. O autor busca evidenciar a limitação das teorias da justiça de tradição liberal, invocando a necessidade de uma visão integrada das relações sociais experimentadas nas esferas referidas por Hegel, concebendo-se uma experiência concreta de liberdade social. Nesse sentido, evidencia-se o caráter interdisciplinar e emancipatório do método de reconstrução normativa como base teórica para a justificação pública nas sociedades modernas.This research object aims to study and identify the essential traits involved in the theoretical approach of social and political relations brought in the work Freedom’s Right by the german philosopher Axel Honneth. It analyses the hegelian influence on the concept of freedom, as well as the factors related to the supply of subjective needs, mediated by the different social "spheres". Honneth thus seeks to bring to light the understanding of a new model of freedom stemming from Hegel’s Philosophy of Law, which differs substantially from traditional models. The author seeks to highlight the limitation of liberal theories of justice, invoking the need for an integrated view of the social relations experienced in the spheres referred to by Hegel, conceiving a concrete experience of social freedom. In this sense, the interdisciplinary and emancipatory character of the normative reconstruction method is evidenced, as a theorical basis for public justification in modern societies
Inconstant lover; On top of Old Smoky; Texas cowboy
voiceCollected by Max Hunter for Mary Celestia Parler
Transcribed by Nathaniel Lucy
Sung by Laura McDonald
Springdale, Arkansas
July 23, 1958
Reel 253-254
The Rose of Naideen
[A note and text transcription from the same recording can be found in the Max Hunter Collection at maxhunter.missouristate.edu titled “The Rose of Naideen”]
[The first verse is mistranscribed in the Hunter Collection and should be this:
It’s raining and it’s hailing
And the moon won’t give light
My horses can’t travel
Those dark roads tonight]Funding for digitization provided by the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Happy Hollow Foundation
The great stone face /
Publication date supplied by cataloger.Title from cover.Mode of access: Internet.OSU's copy 3: Bound with: The snow image / by Nathaniel Hawthorne -- The miraculous pitcher / by Nathaniel Hawthorne -- Circe's palace -- The three golden apples / by Nathaniel Hawthorne -- Selected poems -- The vision of Sir Launfal / by James Russell Lowell -- Prose selections -- The deserted village / by Oliver Goldsmith -- Cotter's Saturday night and other poems / by Robert Burns -- The rime of the ancient mariner / by Samuel Taylor Coleridge -- Brewer's collection of favorite songs -- Brewer{u2019}s collection of popular songs.OSU's copy 3 lacking portrait
Nathaniel Hawthorne as a Revolutionary Author. Feminism in The Scarlet Letter
The protagonist of The Scarlet Letter works as a predecessor for fictional feminist heroines. Much like modern times, Hester Prynne is born into a society that favors men and the main character suffers from the unfair treatment that is brought upon her due to her femininity. Nathaniel Hawthorne invents a universe to show female oppression and how harmful it can be for individuals to be regarded as less important because of one’s gender. The purpose of this study is to investigate how Nathaniel Hawthorne was able to create one of the first strong female protagonists by using elements from feminist movements that occurred even after his death. The concept of the second and third waves of feminism was not yet invented before the author passed, but it is still possible to find traces of these feminist waves in The Scarlet Letter. At the time of its publication, The Scarlet Letter revolutionized female-centred narratives; the main character of The Scarlet Letter is unique since her behavior and mindset differ from other female characters of the 19th century. By using feminist theory it is clear that Nathaniel Hawthorne’s innovative way of thinking sets the foundation for him to create the feminist character of Hester Prynne. The author shows, through his novel, that he is aware of how unfair women are treated and reflects that into The Scarlet Letter. Even though women today are not facing the same problems that Hester Prynne encounters, there are still social changes that need to be made for women to be equal to men. By considering issues from real life and by being inspired by feminists from the 19th century, Nathaniel Hawthorne has created a feminist that is still relevant to this day
Nathaniel Hawthorne's Shadow in The Scarlet Letter
Scholars of American literature have produced innumerable interpretations on Nathaniel Hawthorne's masterpiece The Scarlet Letter. Notably, each different approach to the work has revealed a different viewpoint hidden within the story. Here, the story is to be analyzed in relation to the lifelong inner angst of author Nathaniel Hawthorne. This new approach shows the main characters to be individuals into whom the depth of Nathaniel Hawthorne's psychological mindset has been projected. Arthur Dimmesdale, a young minister, reflects the author's internal struggle over his ancestor's past involvement in the judgement of witches, including at the Salem witch trial in 1692. Chillingworth, a diabolical man, represents Nathaniel Hawthorne's sense of guilt, and shows his commitment as an artist to observing people's inner souls. Hester's freethinking manner and way of life can be seen as Nathaniel Hawthorne's strong determination to become an independent artist, and one who is never to fall victim to the stains of the past and society. Nathaniel Hawthorne's longing for British culture is reflected in Pearl. The particular end that each character meets can also be interpreted as carrying its own unique message. Nathaniel Hawthorne is very negative about Chillingworth; the author shows no sympathy for his own inevitably sinful fate of peeping into people's inner souls. The implications of Dimmesdale's death after his final confession on the scaffold are somewhat ambiguous. It is uncertain whether he was saved or severely judged. More likely, there is a mixture of both elements, and his death clearly shows us that the sinful lifestyle of Nathaniel Hawthorne's ancestors must end. Hester ultimately returns of her own free will to the puritan society of Boston, after having lived for a while in the Old World with her daughter Pearl. Hester's return tells us that Nathaniel Hawthorne's desire for freedom includes the possibility of serving the puritan society. Pearl is the only character alive at the end of the novel, happily married, and possibly in England. Nathaniel Hawthorne's decision to live as an artist includes aspirations of British heritage. Dimmesdale's inherited strong animal nature is the root of the persecuting spirit in the history of the author's' ancestors. Therefore, the scarlet letter A in the story can be interpreted as the initial letter of the word 'animal.'7KJ00002449582論文Articledepartmental bulletin pape
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