247 research outputs found
The grand master, Dr Gregory Levenston, second right, and his retinue wearing their summer ceremonial aprons and collars, Laurelbank Masonic Centre, Sydney, 23 March 2010 [picture] /
Title from acquisitions documentation, see file NLA10/2405.; Part of the collection: Freemasons in New South Wales, 2010.; Acquired in digital format; access copy available online.; Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.; Purchased from the photographer, 2010. "Photograph taken at Laurelbank Masonic Centre, Penshurst/Laurel Streets Willoughby, Sydney on 23rd March 2010 at 6 pm. The Grand Stewart robes the Grand Master in his regalia in preparation to entering the Old Sydneians' Lodge. They are wearing their summer suit"--Information supplied by photographer
The Final Act of Juliette Willoughby
From the author of The Club, a Reese Witherspoon Book Club Pick, The Final Act of Juliette Willoughby is Ellery Lloyd's compulsive multiple - timeline mystery – a story of love and madness, of obsession and revenge. This novel was co-written by Paul Vlitos (University of Greenwich) and Collette Lyons (writing together as Ellery Lloyd). In a prestigious starred notice, the influential US journal Kirkus Review noted that: “Lloyd’s novel interweaves the stories of three distinct time periods [1930s Paris, 1990s Cambridge, present-day Dubai] to create an elegant tapestry—and a novel of love, suspense, family secrets, Egyptology, surrealism, and corruption. […] A delightful puzzle box of a novel.” The Final Act of Juliette Willoughby was also one of ’10 noteworthy books for June’ in the Washington Post, a Crime Fiction Pick of the Month in The Sunday Times – and Heat magazine’s book of the week! The novel was published on the 20th June 2024 by Macmillan in the UK and on the 11th June by Harper Collins in the US
Competition Law – Parallel imports – another view
The author discusses issues of brand ownership and distribution networks and the global market in the light of the High Court decision in the Davidoff case. Article by Tony Willoughby (Senior Partner, Willoughby & Partner) published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies and its Society for Advanced Legal Studies. The Journal is produced by the Society for Advanced Legal Studies at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London
Competition Law – Parallel imports – another view
The author discusses issues of brand ownership and distribution networks and the global market in the light of the High Court decision in the Davidoff case. Article by Tony Willoughby (Senior Partner, Willoughby & Partner) published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies and its Society for Advanced Legal Studies. The Journal is produced by the Society for Advanced Legal Studies at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London
Les pirogues d’Atchin (Vanuatu) d’après les enquêtes de John Willoughby Layard
International audienceThis paper draws heavily on John Willoughby Layard’s important typescript entitled “Canoes” stored at the University of California, San Diego, dedicated to coastal and sea-going canoes, their manufacture, usage and consecration. It consists of drafts for a chapter of a monograph John Willoughby Layard was working on about the people and culture of Atchin, a small island off the northeast coast of Malakula (Vanuatu). The current author notes that these canoes were rigged with an Oceanic spritsail and had the particularity of tacking through the wind when they were of small size (coastal) and of shunting when they were larger (sea-going). The author hypothesizes that the Oceanic spritsail and its associated tacking maneuver were borrowed from the Polynesian maritime tradition, likely via one of the Solomon outliers, while its balance platform likely came from Micronesia.Cet article repose très largement sur un important tapuscrit intitulé « Canoes » écrit par John Willoughby Layard conservé à l’université de Californie, San Diego, et consacré aux pirogues côtières et de pleine mer, à leurs techniques de construction, à leurs usages et à leurs rituels. Il s’agit de différentes versions d’un chapitre devant être intégré à la monographie que John Willoughby Layard prévoyait d’écrire sur les habitants et la culture d’Atchin, une petite île de la côte nord-est de Malakula (Vanuatu). Le présent auteur souligne le fait que ces pirogues gréées avec une voile à livarde océanienne ont la particularité de remonter au vent de manière amphidrome lorsqu’elles sont de petite taille et de manière monodrome lorsqu’elles sont de grande taille. L’auteur poursuit en faisant l’hypothèse que cette voile à livarde et sa manoeuvre monodrome sont un emprunt au monde maritime polynésien, fait peut-être via les « outliers » de l’archipel des Salomon, tandis que la plateforme à balancier serait d’origine micronésienne
Cauldron, Spring 1967
35 p.The Man / Rosario Cardenas -- Photograph / David Weed -- Notes for a Bildungsroman / James Harvey -- Talk and Less Talk in a Broad Meadow / James Harvey -- Notes for an American Faustus: 1966 / Teri White -- Nameless, This Rumplestiltskin Evil / Mary Klepser -- Block Print / Merwin Lewis -- Chimera / Translated by Ronald Sharp -- The Old Man / Howard Brecher -- The Fat Boy / Karen Stanley -- Selected Illustrations of the Book of Job / Barbara Paxson -- Stoney Ocean Avenue / Teri White -- Of Oedipus & Poets & Kings / Karen Stanley -- Photograph / Mark Rubin -- An Interview with Stanley Elkin -- Photograph / Mark Rubin -- I Would Softly Dare to Weep / Leon Raikes -- A Dance of Crete / Karen Stanley -- On the Dike / James Harvey -- "Notes from a Foreign Daughter" / Judy Randall -- Am I Not the Wind? / Merwin Lewis -- And Still the Rain / Bruce Stewart -- Engraving / Dale Willoughby
Further developments in Qualitative Graphical Reasoning
A previous report described a computer program called GRASP which performs qualitative graphical reasoning by means of cartesian coordinate sketch graphs. This report extends the ideas advanced, and gives more details on the workings of the implemented program. An application program called QED is also described. QED interrogates a database to find items of data which match or nearly match the target set of conditions. For imperfectly matching data items, QED uses GRASP to attempt to find graphs which describe the qualitative effects of the mismatch in conditions. Keywords: Qualitative reasoning, graphs, qualitative relationships, perturbations, databases, KEE. HCRL Technical Report No 66 Wed, Jul 20, 1994 2 Please note that from 1st October 1990, the author can be contacted at Harlequin Ltd, Barrington Hall, Barrington, Cambridge CB2 3RG, U K. HCRL Technical Report No 66 Wed, Jul 20, 1994 3 Further developments in Qualitative Graphical Reasoning Anthony Willoughby 1 Introduction..
Data accessibility in the chemical sciences: an analysis of recent practice in organic chemistry journals
The discoverability and reusability of data is critical for machine learning to drive new discovery in the chemical sciences, and the ‘FAIR Guiding Principles for scientific data management and stewardship’ provide a measurable set of guidelines that can be used to ensure the accessibility of reusable data. We investigate the data practice of researchers publishing in specialist organic chemistry journals, by analyzing the outputs of 240 randomly selected research papers from 12 top-ranked journals published in early 2023. We investigate compliance with recommended (but not compulsory) data policies, assess the accessibility and reusability of data, and if the existence of specific recommendations for publishing NMR data by some journals supports author compliance. We find that, although authors meet mandated requirements, there is very limited compliance with data sharing policies that are only recommended by journals. Overall, there is little evidence to suggest that authors’ publishing practice meets FAIR data guidance. We suggest first steps that researchers can take to move towards a positive culture of data sharing in organic chemistry. Routine actions that we encourage as standard practice include deposition of raw and metadata to open repositories, and inclusion of machine-readable structure identifiers for all reported compounds
Exchange bias systems studied by high resolution quantitative magnetic force microscopy
It is generally believed that exchange bias (EB) implies the presence of pinned uncompen-
sated moments pin-UCS in the antiferromagnet (AF) layer that are coupled to the ferromagnet
(F) layer. An obstacle to understanding the EB e�ect is that only a subset of the UCS (those
pinned and coupled to the F) are responsible for the EB-e�ect. The materials used, but also the
experimental method and preparation may a�ect these subsets of UCS in distinct ways [19], and
an interpretation of UCS measurements must take this into account. Moreover, the materials
morphology, texture, defect density and nature of grain boundaries in
uence the density and
spatial distribution of the pin-UCS. Experimental methods that measure the pin-UCS density
distribution with spatial resolution comparable to the materials' grain size are needed.
Here we study F/AF heterostructure-samples by VSM and quantitative, high resolution
MFM. MFM works in magnetic �elds (up to several T) but is not element speci�c. Analyzing
data acquired with the F-layer in the saturated state and with di�erent magnetization states of
the tip allows the separation of the di�erent sources of MFM contrast. Using quantitative MFM
we measure the local areal density of pinned uncompensated moments (pin-UCS) in the antifer-
romagnetic (AF) CoO layer and correlate the F-domain structure in a perpendicular anisotropy
CoPt multilayer with the pin-UCS density [15]. Larger applied �elds drive the receding domains
to areas of proportionally higher pin-UCS aligned antiparallel to F-moments. This con�rms
our prior results [19] that these antiparallel pin-UCS are responsible for the EB-e�ect, while
parallel UCS coexist. The data con�rm that the evolution of the F-domains is determined by
the pin-UCS in the AF-layer, and also present examples of frustration in the system. This frus-
tration and the inhomogeneous spatial distribution of the pin-UCS also have a major e�ect on
the coercivity of the EB-systems that has not yet been acounted for. Moreover, grain-boundary
engineering can be used to decouple the AF grains leading to a stronger EB-e�ect but a smaller
coercivity.
New approaches with rare-earth-ferrimagnet/ferromagnet bilayers to increase unidirectional
anisotropy provided by the EB-e�ect will be discussed
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