@AWK, I would be happy to discuss the usage of curved arrows in another thread.
My original answer was to explain to the poster how I thought his curved arrows might have been interpreted. I have found great variety of curved arrow usage in textbooks, presentations, and the web. I am aware of IUPAC nomenclature and I am unaware of IUPAC curved arrow usage or guidelines or similar guidelines by the ACS. Without reviewing guidelines for authors, I don't think there are directions there, especially as curved arrows are uncommon.
Re: E1, see diagram. I interpret this as a hydride rearrangement. A similar use of rearrangement arrows,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beckmann_rearrangementhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinacolan erroneous arrow,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rearrangement_reactionThis is what I thought. The poster was using a curved arrow to show bond formation with the curved arrow ending on the atom. There are virtually two different curved arrow uses. A double barbed arrow ends on an atom for bond formation. However, with single barbed arrows, the arrow ends where the bond forms, therefore two arrows are required. If a single barbed arrow is used to show bond formation, then arguably a second arrow would be needed (blue below). This would be consistent, but unusual. I believed there is an inconsistency in curved arrow usage. In resonance structures, the arrows always end between atoms to indicate a change in bond order. Some authors maintain that symbolism and similarly end arrows between atoms to indicate a change in bond formation or bond order. While this is consistent, it is not common (except for radical reactions). I thought the poster was trying to understand this inconsistency.