17,312 research outputs found

    Oral history interview with William Doyle

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    William Doyle is the author of An American Insurrection

    Letter, C. B. Doyle, November 23, 1938

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    In this letter, dated November 23, 1938, C. B. Doyle, principle Agronomist of the U. S. Department of Agriculture writes Attala County, Mississippi Extension Agent, James Franklin Buchanan in reply to Buchanan\u27s request for information on gin mixing of cotton seed. Doyle directs Buchanan to seek out J. E. Hite of Jackson, Mississippi for further information on the project.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/mss-james-franklin-buchanan/1356/thumbnail.jp

    Data from: Is DNA a Good Model Polymer?

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    Data appearing in figure files with compiled figures.Tree, Douglas R; Muralidhar, Abhiram; Doyle, Patrick S; Dorfman, Kevin D. (2013). Data from: Is DNA a Good Model Polymer?. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://hdl.handle.net/11299/158704

    Reactivity and selectivity in intermolecular insertion reactions of chlorophenylcarbene

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    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

    Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

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    Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (right) was a doctor and an author

    The relationship between Ford, Kipling, Conan Doyle, Wells and British propaganda of the First World War

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    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

    Doyle Manuscripts

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    This small collection of 18 items, consists of letters from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and fragments of Sherlock Holmes stories, as well as correspondence from early Sherlockians such as Christopher Morley, Howard S. Mott, Edgar W. Smith and Vincent Starrett
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