231 research outputs found
Publications submitted for the degree of D.Sc.
The publications are given in chronological order in the accompanying list but are presented in groups of related topics in the collection of reprints submitted. These topics are (i) Molecular Structure (a) Dipole Moments (b) Electron Diffraction (c) Thermochemistry (in chronological order of the development of my practical interest in the individual techniques). (ii) Natural Product Organic Chemistry and (iii) Miscellaneous. The great majority of the publications have joint authorship, as is usual in chemical publications. I have tried to assess the extent of my contribution to each but it is virtually impossible to do this accurately in short form. (i) Molecular Structure (a) Dipole Moments Items 1, 2, 12, 13, 31, 32, 33. Item 1. The account of the "Mills-Nixon Effect" work with dibromo-hydrindenes and -tetralins suggested by Prof. Sidgwick. Submitted for Oxford B.A. (Part II) and D.Phil. Item 2. Report of reading of paper on item l before Chem. Soc. Not included in the collection for this submission.Item 12. The account of the extension of the Mills-Nixon work to dioxa-indanes and dioxatetralins. The work was mine in idea and execution. Sir Robert had had experience of some dioxaindanes ("methylene dioxy" compounds) in his alkaloid work.Item 13. Preliminary report on work fully reported in item 31. Not included the collection for this submission.Item 31. The account of the work on the molecular structure of tetrahalides and the tetranitrate of pentaerythritol.Item 32. The account of the work on the mechanism of the activation of the methyl group in some nitrotoluenes.Item 33. An extension of the work described in item 31 dealing with ethers of pentaerythritol.With items 31, 32, 33 the ideas and writing up were mine. Much of the experimental work was also mine.(i) Molecular Structure (b) Electron DiffractionItems 3, 4, 6, 7.Item 3 records the determination of the structures of trimethyl; phosphine and -arsine. This was suggested by Professor L.O. Brockway and by Professor Pauling to extend the work they had already done on trimethylamine. The preparation of the materials, the electron diffraction and the writing up were all mine. (I believe that this is still the only experimental determination of the distribution of the 3 valencies about trivalent -P and -As).Item 4 records the investigation of interatomic distances in the molecules of methylacetylene, dimethylacetylene, diacetylene, dimethyl-diacetylene and some related cyanogen derivatives. This work, which was suggested by Prof. Pauling, arose from the reporting, from spectroscopic studies, by Herzberg of the unexpectedly short C-C single bond in methylacetylene. It was important that this bond length should be studied by electron diffraction lest there be any discrepancy between the diffraction and spectroscopic methods. The short bond was confirmed, and the finding was of interest in the early days of hyperconjugation theory. (The diacetylene work proved of interest to Sir Ewart Jones' collaborators in the early days in Manchester of his work on poly-ynes). I made the compounds and Dr. Palmer and I did the diffraction work. I began the writing up. Prof. Pauling completed it.Item 6 records the electron diffraction studies on 4,5-dibromo-o-xylene, dibromohydrindene and dibromotetralin. The identity of the Br - Br distances in all three compounds proved the absence of Mills-Nixon fixation in the hydrindene. The idea for this work was mine. I hadmade the compounds (in Oxford) I did some of the diffraction work. Dr. Kossiakoff finished it and wrote up the paper.Item 7. This is the report of the reading of a paper describing the work carried out in Item 6, before a Chemical Society meeting in Bristol. (Item 6 was not generally available in England at that time). Item 7 isnot included in the collection for this submission.{i) molecular Structure (c) ThermochemistrvItems 8, 9, 10, 11, 14, 15, 20, 21, 24, 25, 34, 35, 36, 38, 40, 42, 43, 45, 49.Item 8 records indirect evidence in favour of the, then unestablished, high value, 171 kcal gram-atom-1, for the latent heat of sublimation of graphite, the heat of atomisation of carbon, the fundamental thermochemical quantity for the evaluation of the molecular energetics of organic compounds. The evidence came from thermochemical data on mercury-dialkyls and -diphenyl. A joint effort by Prof. Sidgwick and me.Item 9. Tha report on the section I gave to a symposium in Manchester on the heats of atomisation of carbon and nitrogen. Not included in the collection for this submission.Item 10. An analysis on the thermochemical and spectroscopic data on cyanogen giving evidence for the higher values for the heats of atomisation of carbon and of nitrogen. (No collaborators),Item 11. A critical discussion on the concept of bond energy calling for clear distinction in usage between "mean bond energy term, E" and "bond dissociation energy, D". (A joint effort with Dr. Skinner).Item 14 reports the heat of combustion of ethyl iodide and the evaluation of E(C-I) and of D(C2H5-I). The idea was mine: the combustion work, Dr. White's. The interpretation of data and the writing up, mine.Item 15. A critical review of the methods of evaluation of the heat of atomisation of carbon. (no collaborators).Items 20, 25, 40, 49 record thermochemical (combustion) studies on unusual molecular systems formally containing alternate double and single C to C bonds; either having the molecular formula.(CH)x or derived therefrom. The studies Were aimed at detecting the presence or absence of aromatic "resonance energy". They could be linked with the Mills-Hixon work and with Prof. George B. Kistiakowsky's studies on heats of hydrogenation. With compounds of the series x = 4n + 2, Huckel' s rule, asserting that such compounds should he aromatic, wasconfirmed. (My interest in cyclooctatetraene began in 1938 when Professor R. B. Woodward, then at N, I. T. , pointed out to me the similarity of the physical properties of Willstatter's compound withthose of the isomeric styrene and suggested that Willstatter's compound was, in fact, styrene. I mentioned this to Sir Robert when I returned to Oxford: he said "Nonsense, Willstatter was much too good an organic chemist to make such a mistake". So there was considerable interest when some of the first specimen of Reppe's material to reach England was made available to me, in Manchester, towards the end of the War.)The ideas behind this (CH)x work on the writing up were mine; preparation of the substances was not mine though in the earlier work which of the calorimetry was mine.Items 21, 24, 35, 36, 38, 43. A series of papers on the energetics of carbon to oxygen bonds. Item 36 has connections with the Mills-Nixon work. Item 38 has connections with the pentaerythritol work. The ideas for this work were mine. Most of the experimental calorimetrywas my collaborators'. The writing up was mine.Item 34 records the molecular structural analysis of thermochemical data on nitramines, nitrate esters and C-nitro compounds. This work is partly the war-time M.O.S. work, extended and somewhat refined. Tile ideas, the compounds, and the writing-up are mine. The experimentalcalorimetry is due to my collaborators. The final phase of the work, which enabled the explosive power of any compound of the above classes to be calculated from the molecular formula, was not included in item 34 but is briefly recorded in item 50, page 404.Item 45 is a critical review of modern thermochemical techniques and results. A joint effort by Dr. Mortimer and me. (ii) Natural Product Organic ChemistryItems 5, 22, 26, 27, 29, 30, 37, 39, 41.Item 5. Though my work in Sir Robert's steroid synthesis prograrmne did not lend itself to publication, Sir Robert invited me to prepare the section on "Synthesis of Steroids" for the Ann Reps for 1939. (Nocollaborators).Item 22. A review of methods for the analysis of a-amino-acid fixtures, the material accumulated in the course of setting up such analysis in Keele. (No collaborators).Item 26. A report on the proceedings at a symposium on Peptide Chemistry, part of the Anniversary Meeting of the Chemical Society in London. (No collaborators. I chaired one of the sessions).Item 27. A Quarterly Review article on peptide synthesis and degradation (preparation shared with Dr. Law),Item 29. A report on the proceedings at an international Conference on Chromosomes held in Wageningen in Holland at which I was an invited speaker.Item 30. Chapter on chemistry of proteins and nucleic acids from the full report (book) of the Conference treated in item 29.Item 37. Preliminary report on the establishment of the structure of peptide, Evolidine: fully reported in item 39. Not included in the collection for this submission.Item 39. Full report on the structure of Evolidine. I obtained the material (from Professor Birch), suggested the problem, wrote up the work and helped in the supervision. The main day-to-day supervision was due to Prof. Millar: most of the experimental work was done by Dr. Law.Item 41. Chapter on Protein Structure in "Rodd-Robinson".Item 42 reports studies on ethoxyacetylene as a coupling reagent in peptide synthesis (Dr. Cohen is the main local authority on the use of ethoxyacetylene.) I suggested the immediate use in peptide work, Dr. Cohen did most of the experimental work.(iii) MiscellaneousItems 16, 17, 18, 19, 28, 44, 46, 47, 48, 51.Items 16 and 17. Two papers on the elucidation of the structure of "Knudsen's Base", an innocuous self-contained fragment of the war time work on the mechanism of the nitration of hexamine. These are both 6-author papers. Dr. Thomas and Prof. Urbanski were working independently of the Manchester group of 4, mainly on different problems but some of their data proved very helpful. Sir Edmund Hirst was directing the Manchester work. Dr. Foss did most of the experimental preparation work. Prof. Jones and I did the rest. As I recall, the idea of the correct structure occurred in discussion between Prof. Jones and me, and was confirmed in discussion with 5ir Edmund. I wrote up the papers.Items 18 and 19. Two chapters in the first (1961) edition of the Rodd-Robinson Chemistry of Carbon Compounds. These have been superseded by the corresponding chapters in the second (1964) edition (item 46, 47) and are not included in the collection for this submission.Item 28. An invited article for the R.I.C. series "Schools of chemistry in Great Britain and Ireland". (No collaborators).Item 44. An account of a novel rearrangement which was found in the course of Dr. Cohen's ethoxyacetylene studies. Dr. Cohen directed the work. Dr. Banks did most of the experimental work. I advised on thermodynamic aspects and on the writing up.Items 46 and 47. Chapters on (a) Physical properties of carbon compounds and (b) Modern views on acids and bases, in Rodd's Chemistry of Carbon Compounds, second (1964) edition.Item 48. An account of a piece of work which arose as follows. As external examiner to the College of Technology in Belfast, I was asked for advice on the research programme of a member of the College Staff, Mr. C. Wilson. His supervisor had left Belfast. He had done a great deal of preparative work but was being greatly handicapped by the slow operation of the only U.V. spectrometer available to him (an obsolescent non-recording model). It occurred to me that Mr. Wilson's problem (electronic shifts in sterically hindered aromatic systems (durenes)) was in a field of interest to Dr. Cohen and to me, that with Dr. Cohen to supervise and instruct in the operation and interpretation of automatic recording U.V. and N.M.R. spectrometers and with Prof. Millar to look after organic problems, we could, in a few weeks of the long vacation, in Keele, given Mr. Wilson's residence and co-operation, provide him with at least a workable basis for his thesis. Mr. Wilson's, Dr. Cohen's and Prof. Millar's co-operation was immediate, and the job was done.Item 51. This is the official account of "the state of the Nation" as far as the Keele Chemistry Department was concerned for "the Opening'', in 1968, by Lord Todd (an old friend whom I had first met in Sir Robert's lab in 1934).I have also included the account in Nature of the Opening. This is not a "publication" but Prof. Millar and I gave the information and Mr. Vickers, of the Keele Librarv staff, provided the photograph.Concerning the books:Item 23. This was without collaborators.Item 50. Prof. Millar and I shared this equally.Item 52. Prof. Millar and I shared this equally.(I, perhaps, did more in the actual textual revision for item 52. We both, equally, suffered from the mediaeval eccentricities of the Press, over publicity. This confirmed us in our judgment that our forthcomingcommissioned work is rightly being handled by the Cambridge University Press).TailpieceProfessor Lawlor, in the Keele Senate in 1950, reacting more quickly than the rest of us to our first Registrar's strange pronunciation of "Emeritus", said, "They told me, Emma Rightus, you were dead"
Can Expanding the Use of Computers Improve the Performance of Small Minority- and Women-Owned Enterprises?
This study aims at increasing our knowledge in this area by obtaining and analyzing new data to answer three key questions:
1. What performance and productivity gains are achieved when small businesses and minority- and women-owned enterprises (MWEs) implement information technology? What are the potential economic benefits of improving MWEs’ use of information technology?
2. What are the factors that lead some MWEs to take great advantage of computer technologies and that lead others to utilize computers only in a limited way? What are the barriers to MWEs’ adoption and effective use of technology? In particular, how significant are the impacts of constraints on capital, on knowledge of the technology and its possible role in improving businesses, and on the ability to train workers?
3. Is there a gap in computer use that separates small MWEs and small, white-male-owned enterprises? Are MWEs falling behind in adopting and implementing information technologies for important business functions?Originally published by The Urban Institute. Copyright © March 2004 The Urban Institute
Math counts: major and gender differences in college mathematics coursework
Mathematics is an important and hotly contested aspect of U.S. postsecondary education. Its importance for academics and careers and the extent and impact of math achievement disparities are all subject of longstanding debate. Yet there is surprisingly little research into how much and what types of mathematics courses are taken by U.S. undergraduates and the extent of math achievement differentials among students. This article advances the understanding of math course taking by developing course-taking metrics for a nationally representative cohort of bachelor’s graduates. Using NCES transcript data to construct consistent measures of mathematics and quantitative course taking, our analysis finds large variability both within and between STEM/non-STEM majors and a large population of non-STEM graduates earning mathematics credits comparable to their peers in STEM fields. Mathematics course taking differs substantially from course taking in other subjects.We also find that often observed gender differentials are a function of major, not gender, with females in the most mathematics-intensive programs earning as many or more mathematics credits than their male peers.Peer reviewe
A politics of conversion: nihilism and love in Toni Morrison's fiction
Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro de Comunicação e Expressão. Programa de Pós-Graduação em Letras.O estudo Uma Política de Conversão: Niilismo e Amor na Ficção de Toni Morrison começa com a idéia de que a Literatura Afro-Americana apresenta um sentido de auto-reflexividade e hibridismo, através do qual autobiografia dialoga com romance, o espiritual se funde com o político. A partir deste traço dialógico a auto-reflexividade é politicamente estabelecida entre niilismo e amor. Na política de conversão, o estudo analisa as formas como mulheres negras, individualmente ou em grupo, fogem da escravidão para a liberdade, avançam da individualidade para a coletividade, ou substituem niilismo por amor. Metodologicamente o estudo apresenta sete capítulos. O primeiro discute os aspectos dialógicos que ilustram as conexões entre narrativas espirituais, de escravos e ficção, entre espiritualidade e política. O segundo examina o diálogo entre a conversão, pregação pública e formação da comunidade em Diário e Experiências Religiosas de Lee. O capítulo sugere que ao afirmar espiritualidade e humanidade a narradora abre profundo espaço para a mulher negra reclamar direitos civis. O terceiro discute o diálogo no interior da política de conversão entre narrativa de escravos e ficção. Este diálogo lida com niilismo e amor em Incidentes de Jacobs e Amada, Sula e O Olho Mais Azul de Morrison. Para a análise de niilismo e amor valores individuais e coletivos são considerados em relação a cinco aspectos: ambiente e agente antagonistas, agente de apoio, propósito da personagem e resultado alcançado. É visível, no estudo, o apoio que certas mulheres recebem de suas comunidades para contra-atacar antagonistas. O apoio nem sempre resulta na superação do niilismo e, por isso, derrota temporária pode ocorrer antes que elas sejam reintegradas à comunidade, como acontece com Linda Brent. O quarto capítulo examina as fraquezas e as energias da política da conversão e a reintegração de Sethe Suggs à comunidade de Bluestone Road. O quinto avalia como a comunidade de Bottom tenta controlar a individualidade de Sula Peace e como um grupo de mulheres lideradas por Nel Wrights consegue resgatar o espírito de independência da heroína. O sexto mostra como a política da conversão das mulheres de Lorain é incapaz de garantir a saúde mental de Pecola Breedlove, mas consegue criar um papel mais consistente para o grupo. No sétimo, a conclusão examina da relação dialética entre niilismo e amor ou auto-amor nas experiências dos indivíduos e dos grupos. O estudo sugere que em Incidentes a busca de Linda Brent por liberdade envolve elementos de autodestruição e de autoempoderamento. Da mesma maneira, o estudo conclui que em Amada o amor que Sethe Suggs tem para as suas crianças mata a própria filha, enfatizando, assim, o desejo de livrá-la da escravidão. Igualmente em Sula, a individualidade de Sula Peace não apenas limita, mas também expande as experiências do grupo, levando-o à emancipação. Finalmente, em O Olho Mais Azul a luta de Pecola Breedlove por amor e beleza reflete auto-ódio ao mesmo tempo em que reconstrói a auto-apreciação de toda a comunidade
A more comprehensive and commanding delineation: Mary Shelley's narrative strategy in Frankenstein
This thesis argues that the first edition of Frankenstein challenges conventional reading by employing what Simpson in Irony and Authority in Romantic Poetry calls Romantic irony, where the absence of a stable 'metacomment' precludes an authoritative reading. The novel hints at such readings but prevents them. The insights offered by Tropp's Mary Shelley's Monster, Baldick's In Frankenstein's Shadow, Poovey's The Proper Lady and the woman writer and Swingle's, 'Frankenstein's Monster and its Relatives: Problems of Knowledge in English Romanticism' are considered, but none recognises the full implications of the instability deriving from multiple first- person narratives. Clemit's The Godwinian Navel acknowledges the novel's indeterminacy, but reads a specific ideological purpose in it. Paradise Last provides a language to describe the relationship between the monster and Frankenstein, but proves too unstable to fix identity or establish moral value. Similarly, Necessity ultimately fails to provide a stable explanation in terms of cause and effect. The status of nature shifts between foreground and background, never allowing final definition. These uncertainties destabilise knowledge which is compromised by its provisional nature: no authoritative reading is possible, yet the novel has narrative coherence. The reader is encouraged to try to develop a reading the structure prevents. The radical nature of the first edition is highlighted by comparison with the 1831 edition, which removes much of the ambivalence and gives the novel a clearer morality. The novel challenges conventional methods of deriving authority by disturbing the reader's orthodox orientation in the world around him' (Simpson) in order to afford 'a point of view to the imagination for the delineation of human passions more comprehensive and commanding than any which the ordinary relations of existing events can yield' (Mary Shelley)
Maryland\u27s Prompt Criminal Trial Provisions: Hicks and Beyond
In 1971, the Maryland General Assembly and court of appeals adopted the prompt trial provisions. It was not until the court\u27s 1979 decision in State v. Hicks, however, that the teeth were put into the provisions, by supplying dismissal as the sanction for violation of the defendant\u27s rights under the prompt trial provisions. Since that time, there has been an abundance of litigation in an attempt to clarify the applicability of the provisions and the sanction. In this article, the author presents a practical guide to the Maryland prompt trial provisions, analyzing the provisions and the wealth of recent case law
Technical efficiency gains from port reform : the potential for yardstick competition in Mexico
The authors show how relatively standard methodologies can help to measure the efficiency gains from reforming the organization of port infrastructure, how those measures can be used to promote competition between ports, and how competition can be built into an incentive-driven regulatory regime. As illustration, they use a case study of port reform in mexico in 1993, the first efficiency analysis of port restructuring in a developing country. Their analysis, which covers 1996-99 and relies on a stochastic production frontier, shows that overall, Mexico has achieved annual efficiency gains of 6-8 percent in the use of port infrastructure since assigning its management to independent, decentralized operators. Changes in relative performance ratings are revealing. They identify consistent sets of leaders and laggards, including some that would not have been identified by partial productivity indicators commonly used in the sector. The authors'main conclusions: 1) Reforms have significantly improved average port performance. 2) The analytically sound performance rankings allowed by the port-specific efficiency measures can help to promote yardstick competition in the sector. These rankings are superior to those that would emerge from use of partial productivity indicators. They account for the joint effects of all inputs on outputs--which is crucial, because it avoids the risk of inconsistent rankings based on different partial indicators, arbitrarily chosen. Developing the database method to measure efficiency in countries with no strong tradition of database development is an enormous task--especially in transport sectors, where the tradition of generating databases useful to policymakers is in its infancy. The most immediate effect of this exercise was to reveal the poverty of the database in the Mexican port sector and the need for regulators to invest in its development.Transport and Trade Logistics,Environmental Economics&Policies,Labor Policies,Economic Theory&Research,Common Carriers Industry,Environmental Economics&Policies,Ports&Waterways,Transport Security,Economic Theory&Research,Transport and Trade Logistics
Springall, Harold Douglas, (24 June 1910–2 Nov. 1982), Professor of Chemistry, University of Keele, 1950–75, now Emeritus (Head of Department, 1950–74)
The story of Waitstill Baxter,
Mode of access: Internet.OSU's c.2 part of Grosset & Dunlap Collection.OSU's copy 2 inscribed by author
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