20,984 research outputs found
Indian Days and Burmese Nights: Flying Beaufighters in Southeast Asia with 177 RAF Squadron
This narrative is part of a longer one of personal reminiscences of my experiences in the RCAF during the Second World War and only concerns my operational tour flying Beaufighters with 177 Squadron, Royal Air Force, in Southeast Asia from early March 1944 until the end of the year. Preceding the operational tour I had spent two years training and waiting in Canada and the United Kingdom. During operational training at East Fortune near Edinburgh flying Beaufighter lis, I was crewed with Flight Sergeant A.J. Aldham, a reserved, slim, blonde Englishman as Observer (i.e. Navigator-wireless operator-gunner). Alf quickly established his capability as a navigator and good companion in the as yet poorly understood game of war. Following a second stage of operational training of Beaufighter Is and Vis at Catfoss near Hull, Yorkshire, we picked up a new Beaufighter X from the factory at Filton, tested it, and then flew it to India on a reinforcement flight. We were surprised on arrival at Karachi on 1 September 1943 to find we were separated from the aircraft. We were then left to languish in an aircrew pool until December when we were assigned to the Southeast Asia Air Command Communications Squadron. Here we put in three months flying lesser VIPs about India until we were posted to 177 at the beginning of March
John Macrone: Victorian publisher
I do not delude myself that even colleagues in English literature will be excited by the detailed chronicle of the fall of a minor Victorian publisher. But I shall be grateful for any general reaction to the larger project of which the following essay is part.
It is widely agreed that we know too little about the
publishers who were partners (if sometimes sleeping partners) in the
production of nineteenth century literature. He need, as one
Dickensian critic recently put it, a "magisterial" book on the subject.
There isn't any such work in prospect. Nor is there any comprehensive
history of British publishing (even more urgently needed) under way.
Either of these tasks would exceed the power of any single critic, in
my opinion. But it is possible to make some contribution -- even at
this preliminary stage -- to what will eventually be (as I expect) a
collaborative venture. What I intend is to publish a series of
articles which will profile the fiction-publishing activities of
leading Victorian houses. What follows, on John Macrone, is the first
in the series. I am writing another at the moment on Henry Colburn
(the principal purveyor of "silver fork" romance to early and mid-
Victorian circulating libraries). After that, have sketched out a
study of Chapman and Hall's fiction-publishing policy 1836-64 (when the
feeble Fred Chapman took over); a piece on Bradbury and Evans and the
production of serialized fiction; a short house history of Tinsley
Eros. {who largely succeeded Colburn as suppliers of three deckers to
the libraries in the 1860. and 70s), and so on.
It is fairly easy to devise and plan these essags, and to
anticipate their final connected design. There remains the immediate
problem of placing them. Editors, generally, do not like purely
expository contributions; especially if they are liberally accompanied
by lists, tables and business history. The one journal which would
suit, Publishing History, seems moribund. ~ Library and PBSA are
obvious first choice journals. Thereafter, one will have to publish
where one can, presumably. (The fincrone piece will appear in Dickens
Studies~, sometime over the next three years.
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Review of centrifugal liquid-liquid chromatography using aqueous two-phase solvent (ATPS) systems: Its scale-up and prospects for the future production of high-value biologics
The future challenges in bioprocessing include developing new downstream processes for the purification and manufacture of the protein based medicines of the future to relieve the predicted bottleneck being produced by increasingly high titres from fermentation processes. This review looks at the recent developments in centrifugal liquid-liquid partition chromatography using aqueous two-phase solvent (ATPS) systems, a gentle host medium for biologics, and the prospect for scale-up and eventual manufacture of high value pharmaceutical products
Forgotten Squared: Canadian Aircrews in Southeast Asia, 1942–1945
The battles of World War II in Southeast Asia started with a saga of repeated defeats and retreats by the Allies. Then in 1944, after they re-grouped during a stalemate in 1942–43, the Allies decisively defeated the Imperial Forces of Japan in the jungles of the Chin Hills, leading to a victorious advance down the plains to Rangoon. These campaigns included the greatest land battles and the soundest defeat of the Japanese armies during the war. They were engineered by the combination of sound Allied tactics and resolute jungle fighting that was facilitated by a most intensive and innovative use of airpower. In spite of Winston Churchill’s statement that the attack against Ceylon (Sri Lanka) by a Japanese naval task force in 1942 represented the most dangerous moment of the war, these campaigns have been slighted in subsequent general histories of the World War, as they were by the media of the time.
During the campaigns most of the Allied troops felt that their efforts and sacrifices were unrecognized and largely forgotten in the panorama of the war. They believed that they were poorly supported—they knew they were assigned inferior equipment in deficient quantity—and they suspected they were short-changed by remote leadership and inadequate strategic planning. Those feelings arose in 1941–42 during the defeats and retreats from Malaya, Singapore, the East Indies and Burma, and they hardened during the stalemate after the monsoon of 1942 when the 14th Army dubbed itself the “Forgotten Army.
Exact Solution of a One-Dimensional Multicomponent Lattice Gas with Hyperbolic Interaction
We present the exact solution to a one-dimensional multicomponent quantum
lattice model interacting by an exchange operator which falls off as the
inverse-sinh-square of the distance. This interaction contains a variable range
as a parameter, and can thus interpolate between the known solutions for the
nearest-neighbor chain, and the inverse-square chain. The energy,
susceptibility, charge stiffness and the dispersion relations for low-lying
excitations are explicitly calculated for the absolute ground state, as a
function of both the range of the interaction and the number of species of
fermions.Comment: 13 REVTeX pages + 5 uuencoded figures, UoU-003059
A satellite data terminal for land mobile use
Telesat Mobile Incorporated (TMI) has recently introduced the Mobile Data Service (MDS) into Canada. This paper outlines the system design and some key aspects of the detailed design of the Mobile Earth Terminal (MET) developed by Canadian Aeronautics Limited (CAL) for use with the MDS. The technical requirements for the MET are outlined and the equipment architecture is described. The major design considerations for each functional module are then addressed. Environmental conditions unique to the land mobile service are highlighted, along with the measures taken to ensure satisfactory operation and survival of the MET. Finally, the probable direction of future developments is indicated
Tandem aza-Claisen rearrangement and ring closing metathesis reactions: the stereoselective synthesis of functionalised carbocyclic amides
A one-pot, tandem process has been developed for the efficient synthesis of functionalised carbocyclic amides. A substituted cyclopentenyl trichloroacetamide was synthesised using a tandem thermal aza-Claisen rearrangement and RCM process, while an analogous cyclohexenyl trichloroacetamide was generated with high diastereoselectivity using a tandem MOM-ether directed metal-catalysed aza-Claisen rearrangement and RCM process
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