“…Moreover, the rate of its (ready) solvolysis was approximately the same as that of the tosylate of anti-7hydroxynorbornene (V), a compound that constitutes one of the classical examples exhibiting anchimeric assistance (its solvolysis rate is 1011 larger than that of its saturated analogue VI. Secondly, although the two electron-withdrawing chlorine atoms attached at the termini of the double bond of syn-12-hydroxydieldrin (Ila) would be expected to much reduce its reactivity toward electrophiles, the formation of the bridged reaction product, IX, as an acetolysis product of the isodrin-derived mesylate (VII) must necessarily have involved initial formation of the bridged carbonium ion, VIII, from which IX is derivable by an unexceptionable transannular hydride shift (Bird et al, 1961) (Figure 3). There remained one feature of the tosylate of syn-12-hydroxydieIdrin (lib) that could affect the outcome of its solvolysis: the epoxy grouping.…”