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Reginald Victor Jones CH FRS (1911-1997)
Catalogue of the papers and correspondence of Reginald Victor Jones CH FRS (1911-1997) by Alan Hayward NCUACS catalogue no. 95/8/00 R.V. Jones 1 NCUACS 95/8/00 Title: Catalogue of the papers and correspondence of Reginald Victor Jones CH FRS (1911-1997), physicist Compiled by: Alan Hayward Description level: Fonds Date of material: 1928-1998 Extent of material: 230 boxes, ca 5000 items Deposited in: Churchill Archives Centre, Churchill College, Cambridge CB3 0DS Reference code: GB 0014 2000 National Cataloguing Unit for the Archives of Contemporary Scientists, University of Bath. NCUACS catalogue no. 95/8/00 R.V. Jones 2 NCUACS 95/8/00 The work of the National Cataloguing Unit for the Archives of Contemporary Scientists, and the production of this catalogue, are made possible by the support of the Research Support Libraries Programme. R.V. Jones 3 NCUACS 95/8/00 NOT ALL THE MATERIAL IN THIS COLLECTION MAY YET BE AVAILABLE FOR CONSULTATION. ENQUIRIES SHOULD BE ADDRESSED IN THE FIRST INSTANCE TO: THE KEEPER OF THE ARCHIVES CHURCHILL ARCHIVES CENTRE CHURCHILL COLLEGE CAMBRIDGE R.V. Jones 4 NCUACS 95/8/00 LIST OF CONTENTS Items Page GENERAL INTRODUCTION 6 SECTION A BIOGRAPHICAL A.1 - A.302 12 SECTION B SECOND WORLD WAR B.1 - B.613 36 SECTION C UNIVERSITY OF ABERDEEN C.1 - C.282 95 SECTION D RESEARCH TOPICS AND SCIENCE INTERESTS D.1 - D.456 127 SECTION E DEFENCE AND INTELLIGENCE E.1 - E.256 180 SECTION F SCIENCE-RELATED INTERESTS F.1 - F.275 203 SECTION G VISITS AND CONFERENCES G.1 - G.448 238 SECTION H SOCIETIES AND ORGANISATIONS H.1 - H.922 284 SECTION J PUBLICATIONS J.1 - J.824 383 SECTION K LECTURES, SPEECHES AND BROADCASTS K.1 - K.495 450 SECTION L CORRESPONDENCE L.1 - L.140 495 R.V. -
Verbände Und Truppen Der Deutschen Wehrmacht Und Waffen SS Im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939-1945
GEORG TESSIN Verbände und Truppen der deutschen Wehrmacht und Waffen SS im Zweiten Weltkrieg 1939-1945 ZWEITER BAND: Die Landstreitkräfte 1—5 Bearbeitet auf Grund der Unterlagen des Bundesarchiv-Militärarchivs Herausgegeben mit Unterstützung des Bundesarchivs und des Arbeitskreises für Wehrforschung VERLAG E. S. MITTLER & SOHN GMBH. • FRANKFURT/MAIN 1" ( 1 Einleitung und Quellen Einleitung und Quellen Das vorliegende Werk hat es sich zum Ziel gesetzt, in einer zusammenfassenden Arbeit die Verbände und Einheiten des Kriegsheeres 1939—1945 von der Spitze bis hinab zu den Einheiten in Bataillons- und Abteilungsstärke darzustellen. Es setzt eine vom gleichen Verfasser in der Schriftenreihe des Bundesarchivs erschienene „Formations geschichte der Wehrmacht 1933-1939" J) fort. Die Arbeit soll gleichzeitig als ein Hilfsmittel für die wissenschaftliche Erfor schung des Krieges, wie auch als schnelles und für den Laien gut zu überschauendes Nachschlagewerk für den Gebrauch von Behörden, besonders in Versorgungs fragen, dienen. Bei der Überfülle von Material mußten die Angaben, besonders die über den Einsatz, äußerst knapp gehalten und viele bekannten Daten weggelassen werden. Trotz der Beschränkung wird da. Werk etwa 12 Bände umfassen. Es bietet eine Gesamt schau, Einzelangaben hingegen nur in strengster Auswahl. Die meisten von uns, die den Krieg mitgemacht haben, werden über ihre Einheit umfassender orientiert sein. Ober die Entwicklung aller Wehrmachtteile in ihrer Gesamtheit (Heer, Luftwaffe, Marine, Waffen SS) 2) dürfte auch der Organisationsbearbeiter an verantwortlicher Stelle wäh rend des Krieges kaum unterrichtet gewesen sein. So spiegelt die Arbeit den Aufbau der Wehrmacht wider. a) Literatur An Literatur erschien bereits 1953 eine Arbeit von Siegler über die höheren Dienst stellen der deutschen Wehrmacht.3) Sie erschien zu einem Zeitpunkt, in dem echte Unterlagen kaum zur Verfügung standen und ist auch heute noch als Nachschlagewerk ein gutes Hilfsmittel. -
The Magazine of RAF 100 Group Association
. The magazine of RAF 100 Group Association RAF 100 Group Association Chairman Roger Dobson: Tel: 01407 710384 RAF 100 Group Association Secretary Janine Bradley: Tel: 01723 512544 Email: [email protected] www.raf100groupassociation.org.uk Home to RAF 100 Group Association Memorabilia City of Norwich Aviation Museum Old Norwich Road, Horsham St Faith, Norwich, Norfolk NR10 3JF Telephone: 01603 893080 www.cnam.org.uk 2 Dearest Friends My heartfelt thanks to the kind and generous member who sent a gorgeous bouquet of flowers on one of my darkest days. Thank you so much! The card with them simply said: ‘ RAF 100 Group’ , and with the wealth of letters and cards which continue to arrive since the last magazine, I feel your love reaching across the miles. Thank you everyone for your support and encouragement during this difficult time. It has now passed the three month marker since reading that shocking email sent by Tony telling me he wasn’t coming home from London … ever ! I now know he has been leading a double life, and his relationship with another stretches back into the past. I have no idea what is truth and what is lies any more. To make it worse, they met up here in the north! There are times when I feel my heart can’t take any more … yet somehow, something happens to tell me I am still needed. My world has shrunk since I don’t have a car any more. Travel is restricted. But right here in Filey I now attend a Monday Lunch Club for my one hot meal of the week. -
Historical Dictionary of Air Intelligence
Historical Dictionaries of Intelligence and Counterintelligence Jon Woronoff, Series Editor 1. British Intelligence, by Nigel West, 2005. 2. United States Intelligence, by Michael A. Turner, 2006. 3. Israeli Intelligence, by Ephraim Kahana, 2006. 4. International Intelligence, by Nigel West, 2006. 5. Russian and Soviet Intelligence, by Robert W. Pringle, 2006. 6. Cold War Counterintelligence, by Nigel West, 2007. 7. World War II Intelligence, by Nigel West, 2008. 8. Sexspionage, by Nigel West, 2009. 9. Air Intelligence, by Glenmore S. Trenear-Harvey, 2009. Historical Dictionary of Air Intelligence Glenmore S. Trenear-Harvey Historical Dictionaries of Intelligence and Counterintelligence, No. 9 The Scarecrow Press, Inc. Lanham, Maryland • Toronto • Plymouth, UK 2009 SCARECROW PRESS, INC. Published in the United States of America by Scarecrow Press, Inc. A wholly owned subsidiary of The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc. 4501 Forbes Boulevard, Suite 200, Lanham, Maryland 20706 www.scarecrowpress.com Estover Road Plymouth PL6 7PY United Kingdom Copyright © 2009 by Glenmore S. Trenear-Harvey All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Information Available Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Trenear-Harvey, Glenmore S., 1940– Historical dictionary of air intelligence / Glenmore S. Trenear-Harvey. p. cm. — (Historical dictionaries of intelligence and counterintelligence ; no. 9) Includes bibliographical references. ISBN-13: 978-0-8108-5982-1 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-8108-5982-3 (cloth : alk. paper) ISBN-13: 978-0-8108-6294-4 (eBook) ISBN-10: 0-8108-6294-8 (eBook) 1. -
Coventry: Thursday, 14 November 1940 Ebook, Epub
COVENTRY: THURSDAY, 14 NOVEMBER 1940 PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Frederick Taylor | 368 pages | 10 Jan 2017 | Bloomsbury Publishing PLC | 9781408860281 | English | London, United Kingdom Coventry: Thursday, 14 November 1940 PDF Book Coventry Cathedral was left as a ruin, and is today still the principal reminder of the bombing. Historian Dr Henry Irving, an associate fellow at the Institute of English Studies, said: "What Harrisson describes is a psychological desperation and helplessness. Spence later knighted for this work insisted that instead of re-building the old cathedral it should be kept in ruins as a garden of remembrance and that the new cathedral should be built alongside, the two buildings together effectively forming one church. Retrieved 15 October He said: "The houses on both sides of the street were burning. Accessibility help Skip to navigation Skip to content Skip to footer. They state that while Churchill was indeed aware that a major bombing raid would take place, no one knew what the target would be. Preview — Coventry by Frederick Taylor. Teaching the Bible through popular culture and the arts. Aug 08, Luke Ryan rated it really liked it. The target was Coventry, a manufacturing city in the heart of England with a beautiful medieval centre. Given the intensity of the raid, casualties were limited by the fact that a large number of Coventrians "trekked" out of the city at night to sleep in nearby towns or villages following the earlier air raids. It also provided the push America needed to join Britain in the war. Scientist Reginald Victor Jones , who led the British side in the Battle of the Beams , wrote that "Enigma signals to the X-beam stations were not broken in time" and that he was unaware that Coventry was the intended target. -
Subject Reference Dbase 09-05-2006
Subject reference dbase 09-05-2006 ONDERWERP TYPE NUMMER BIJZ GROEP TREFWOORD1 TREFWOORD2 ELECTRON 1958.12 1958.12 ELEC Z 46 TEK CX GEVR L,KWANTONETC KUBEL TS-N KERST CX LW,KW,LO 0,5/1 KW LW SEND 2.39 As 33/A1 34 Z 101 100-1000 KHZ MOB+FEST MOBS 0,7/1,4 KW SEND AS 60 10.40 AS 60 Z 101 FRUEHE AUSF 3-24 MHZ MOB+FEST MOBS 1 KWTT KW SEND 11.37 S 521 Bs Z 101 =+/-G 1,5.... MOBS 1 KWTT SHORT WAVE TR 5.36 S 486F Z 101 3-7 UND 2,5-6 MHZ MOBS 1 kW KW SEND S 521Bs TELEFUNKEN Z 172 +/-G 1,2K MOBS G1,2K+/- 10 WTT TELEF SENDER 10.34 S 318H Z 101 1500-3333 KHZ GUSS GEH SCHS 100 WTT SEND S 317H TELEFUNKEN Z 172 RS 31g 100-800METER alt SCHS S317H 100 WTT SENDER 4.33 S 317 H Z 101 UNIVERS SENDER 377-3000KHZ MOBS 15 W EINK SEND EMPF 10.35 Stat 272 B Z 101 +/- 15 W SE 469 SE 5285 F1/37 TRSE 15 WTT KARREN STN 4.40 SE 469A Z 101 3-5 MHZ TRSE 15 WTT KW STN 10.35 Spez804/445 Z 101 S= 804Bs E= Spez 445dBg 3-7,5M TRSE 150 WTT LANGW SENDE ANL 8.39 Stat 1006aF Z 101 S 427F SA 429F FLFU 1898-1938 40 JAAR RADIO IN NED SWIERSTRA R. Z 143 INLEGVEL VAN SWIERSTA PRIVE'38 LI 40 RADIO!! WILHELMINA 1kW KW SEND S 486F TELEFUNKEN Z 172 +/-2,5-7,5MHZ MOBS S486 1,5 LW SEND S 366Bs 11.37 S 366Bs Z 101 =+/- G1,5...100-600 KHZ MOBS 1,5kW LW SEND S366Bs TELEFUNKEN Z 172 +/-G 1,5L MOBS S366Bs S366BS 20 WTT FL STN 3.35 Spez 378mF Z 101 TELEF D B FLFU 20 WTT FLUGZEUG STN Spez 378nF TELEFUNKEN Z 172 URALT ANL LW FEST FREQU FLFU Spez378nF Spez378NF 20 WTT MITTELWELL GER Stat901 TELEFUNKEN Z 172 500-1500KHZ Stat 901A/F FLFU 200 WTT KW SEND AS 1008 11.39 AS 1008 Z 101 2,5-10 MHZ A1,A2,A3,HELL -
Pdf Softwarebasis Für Viele Weitere Forschungsarbeiten Auf 273 Frank F
Mathematisch-naturwissenschaftliche Klasse Abhandlungen München, Neue Folge 178 Mathematisch-naturwissenschaftliche Klasse Abhandlungen München 2014, Neue Folge 178 Anpassung, Unbotmäßigkeit und Widerstand Karl Küpfmüller, Hans Piloty, Hans Ferdinand Mayer – Drei Wissenschaftler der Nachrichtentechnik im «Dritten Reich» Joachim Hagenauer Martin Pabst Vorgetragen in der Gesamtsitzung der BAdW am 19. Oktober 2012 ISSN 0005 6995 ISBN 978 3 7696 2565 3 © Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften München, 2014 Layout und Satz: a.visus, München Druck und Bindung: Pustet, Regensburg Vertrieb: Verlag C. H. Beck, München Gedruckt auf säurefreiem, alterungsbeständigem Papier (hergestellt aus chlorfrei gebleichtem Zellstoff) Printed in Germany www.badw.de www.badw.de/publikationen/index.html Später sagte er mir einmal, daß sich ein Eintritt in die Partei wohl früher oder später nicht vermeiden liesse, um seine Fähigkeiten in den Dienst der Technik zu stellen. Man könne sich «nicht in den Schmollwinkel zurückziehen». Ein Kollege über Karl Küpfmüller Prof. Piloty ist der Typ des Intellektuellen, der bewusst mit seiner Kritik zersetzend und herabsetzend wirken will. Er versucht dabei, diese Kritik mit seiner Besorgnis um die Zukunft zu tarnen. Unter Bezugnahme auf die Besorgnis bringt er ständig Bedenken gegen die Politik des Führers und seiner Mitarbeiter vor. Der Gauführer des NSD-Dozentenbunds über Hans Piloty Eine Bestie wie Hitler sollte den Krieg nicht gewinnen. Hans Ferdinand Mayer Inhalt 1. Verhaltensoptionen in der NS-Zeit – eine vergleichende Betrachtung am Beispiel von drei Wissenschaftlern der Nachrichtentechnik 7 2. Lebensläufe und Karrieren: Karl Küpfmüller, Hans Piloty, Hans Ferdinand Mayer 11 3. Die wissenschaftlichen Leistungen der drei Nachrichtentechniker 41 4. Technik und Ingenieure im Nationalsozialismus 50 5. Gemeinsame Wege in Wissenschaft und Forschung – getrennte Wege in der Politik: Das Verhalten von Küpfmüller, Mayer und Piloty im NS-Staat und Krieg 58 6. -
How the Germans Brought Their Communism to Yemen
Miriam M. Müller A Spectre is Haunting Arabia Political Science | Volume 26 This book is dedicated to my parents and grandparents. I wouldn’t be who I am without you. Miriam M. Müller (Joint PhD) received her doctorate jointly from the Free Uni- versity of Berlin, Germany, and the University of Victoria, Canada, in Political Science and International Relations. Specialized in the politics of the Middle East, she focuses on religious and political ideologies, international security, international development and foreign policy. Her current research is occupied with the role of religion, violence and identity in the manifestations of the »Isla- mic State«. Miriam M. Müller A Spectre is Haunting Arabia How the Germans Brought Their Communism to Yemen My thanks go to my supervisors Prof. Dr. Klaus Schroeder, Prof. Dr. Oliver Schmidtke, Prof. Dr. Uwe Puschner, and Prof. Dr. Peter Massing, as well as to my colleagues and friends at the Forschungsverbund SED-Staat, the Center for Global Studies at the University of Victoria, and the Political Science Depart- ment there. This dissertation project has been generously supported by the German Natio- nal Academic Foundation and the Center for Global Studies, Victoria, Canada. A Dissertation Submitted in (Partial) Fulfillment of the Requirements for the- Joint Doctoral Degree (Cotutelle) in the Faculty of Political and Social Sciences ofthe Free University of Berlin, Germany and the Department of Political Scien- ceof the University of Victoria, Canada in October 2014. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommer- cial-NoDerivs 4.0 (BY-NC-ND) which means that the text may be used for non- commercial purposes, provided credit is given to the author. -
The Current-Source Equivalent
Scanning Our Past Origins of the Equivalent Circuit Concept: The Current-Source Equivalent I. INTRODUCTION technical work, Mayer’s personal life perhaps had more im- As described in my previous paper [1], the voltage-source pact. As described in [8], [10], [11], Mayer secretly leaked equivalent was first derived by Hermann von Helmholtz to the British in November 1939 all he knew of Germany’s (1821–1894) in an 1853 paper [2]. Exactly thirty years later warfare capabilities, particularly concerning electronic war- in 1883, Léon Charles Thévenin (1857–1926) published fare. Because he represented Siemens as a technical expert the same result [3], [4] apparently unaware of Helmholtz’s in negotiations with companies outside Germany, he had the work. The generality of the equivalent source network was opportunity to travel widely about Europe. While in Oslo, not appreciated until forty-three years later. Then, in 1926, Norway, he typed and mailed a two-page report of what he Edward Lawry Norton (1898–1983) wrote an internal Bell knew and mailed it to the British Embassy in Oslo. Because Laboratory technical report [5] that described in passing the Mayer wrote it anonymously, the British, led by Reginald usefulness in some applications of using the current-source Jones, had to determine the report’s accuracy. Jones found form of the equivalent circuit. In that same year, Hans what became known as the Oslo Report to be a technically Ferdinand Mayer (1895–1980) published the same result [6] knowledgeable person’s description of what he/she knew (al- and detailed it fully. As detailed subsequently, these people though it contains some errors) [11]. -
Ham Radio Magazine 1989
THE BATTLE OF THE BEAMS PART 1 By D. V. Pritchard, G4G VO, 55 Walker DL,Leigh on Beacon Dijhnen. Light Beacon after dark. Knickebein from Sea, Essex SS9 3QT, England 0600hr on 3159 Shortly afterwards, acooperative prisoner said that Knick- ebein was a beam so narrow and exact that two of them could pinpoint a target with an accuracy of less than a kilometer. He 1940...Now, nearly 50 years from those near-disastrous also added that Knickebein was in some ways similar to X- days, how many of us remember (or even know of) the debt Gergt, assuming that we were familiar with both systems! of gratitude owed to one man who confounded the radio From the wreck of another Heinkel, a diary was rushed to experts and overcame officialdom to earn Churchill's praise Jones. It read: March 5. Two-thirds of flight on leave. Afternoon as the man who "broke the bloody beams" - who went on training on Knickebein, collapsible boats, etc. to unravel the secrets of German radar and Hitler's "V By this time, the cryptographers at Bletchley Park had per- weapons," the V1 pilotless flying bomb (the 'tfoodlebug'] and formed a near miracle by breaklng the German Enigma code. the V2 rocket? One of the intercepted messagesfrom a German aircraft was sent to Jones: Knickebein, Kleve, is confirmed at position 53O24' north and lowest. This meant that the aircraft had orn in London in 1911, R. V. Jones was educated at reported receiving the beam a few miles south of Retford in St. -
Canada Archives Canada Published Heritage Direction Du Branch Patrimoine De I'edition
Strategy for Terror: An analysis of the progress in Allied responses to the emergence of the V-2 Rocket, 1943-1945. by Gavin James King B.A., University of Ottawa, 2002 A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts In the Graduate Academic Unit of History Supervisor: Marc Milner, Ph. D., History Examining Board: Marc Milner, Ph. D., History Steven Turner, Ph. D., History Lawrence Wisniewski, Ph. D., Sociology Gary K. Waite, Ph. D., History, Chair This thesis is accepted by the Dean of Graduate Studies THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW BRUSWICK October, 2006 © Gavin James King, 2006 Library and Bibliotheque et 1*1 Archives Canada Archives Canada Published Heritage Direction du Branch Patrimoine de I'edition 395 Wellington Street 395, rue Wellington Ottawa ON K1A0N4 Ottawa ON K1A0N4 Canada Canada Your file Votre reference ISBN: 978-0-494-49691-6 Our file Notre reference ISBN: 978-0-494-49691-6 NOTICE: AVIS: The author has granted a non L'auteur a accorde une licence non exclusive exclusive license allowing Library permettant a la Bibliotheque et Archives and Archives Canada to reproduce, Canada de reproduire, publier, archiver, publish, archive, preserve, conserve, sauvegarder, conserver, transmettre au public communicate to the public by par telecommunication ou par Plntemet, prefer, telecommunication or on the Internet, distribuer et vendre des theses partout dans loan, distribute and sell theses le monde, a des fins commerciales ou autres, worldwide, for commercial or non sur support microforme, papier, electronique commercial purposes, in microform, et/ou autres formats. paper, electronic and/or any other formats. -
East German SIGINT Operations by Ben Fischer
“One of the Biggest Ears in the World”: East German SIGINT Operations by Ben Fischer East Germany is long gone, but the remarkable feats of its foreign intelligence service, the Hauptverwaltung Aufklärung (HVA), will not soon be forgotten. A former Soviet intelligence officer concedes the HVA was the best in the Warsaw Pact—“even better than the KGB.”1 Spymaster Markus Wolf “had so deeply penetrated the West German government, military, and secret services that about all we had to do was lay back and stay out of [his] way,” exclaims another ex-KGB officer.2 U.S. News & World Report judged the HVA as the Cold War’s best spy agency,3 and two British authors have described its accomplishments as “legendary.”4 Wolf’s former West German opponents also give him his due, claiming that the HVA, by itself, produced 80 percent of all Soviet Bloc intelligence on West Germany and NATO.5 The HVA was quintessentially a HUMINT service. The HVA earned its reputation the old- fashioned way: recruiting spies on a scale that boggles the mind. The German interior ministry believes Wolf may have had 6,000 to 7,000 agents in West Germany when the Berlin Wall fell in 1989.6 The federal attorney’s office has investigated at least 5,500 espionage cases since 1990.7 The HVA’s penetration and neutralization of West German national security agencies made it possible for so many agents to spy for so long. At least 19 former intelligence officers are serving time. Bonn’s top Soviet analyst, the chief of counterintelligence operations against East Germany, and the deputy head of military counterintelligence were all long-term HVA moles.