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it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 11 | operator | nasa
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
it is evoked by light which has a dominant wavelength of roughly 495–570 nm.in subtractive color systems, used in painting and color printing, it is created by a combination of yellow and cyan; in the rgb color model, used on television and computer screens, it is one of the additive primary colors, along with red and blue, which are mixed in different combinations to create all other colors.by far the largest contributor to green in nature is chlorophyll, the chemical by which plants photosynthesize and convert sunlight into chemical energy.many creatures have adapted to their green environments by taking on a green hue themselves as camouflage.several minerals have a green color, including the emerald, which is colored green by its chromium content.during post-classical and early modern europe, green was the color commonly associated with wealth, merchants, bankers, and the gentry, while red was reserved for the nobility.for this reason, the costume of the mona lisa by leonardo da vinci and the benches in the british house of commons are green while those in the house of lords are red.it also has a long historical tradition as the color of ireland and of gaelic culture.it is the historic color of islam, representing the lush vegetation of paradise.it was the color of the banner of muhammad, and is found in the flags of nearly all islamic countries.in surveys made in american, european, and islamic countries, green is the color most commonly associated with nature, life, health, youth, spring, hope, and envy.in the european union and the united states, green is also sometimes associated with toxicity and poor health, but in china and most of asia, its associations are very positive, as the symbol of fertility and happiness.because of its association with nature, it is the color of the environmental movement.
greece | language | greek language
no related information
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | epoch | 2006-12-31
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | birthplace | england <tsp> alfred garth jones | deathplace | sidcup
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it is evoked by light which has a dominant wavelength of roughly 495–570 nm.in subtractive color systems, used in painting and color printing, it is created by a combination of yellow and cyan; in the rgb color model, used on television and computer screens, it is one of the additive primary colors, along with red and blue, which are mixed in different combinations to create all other colors.by far the largest contributor to green in nature is chlorophyll, the chemical by which plants photosynthesize and convert sunlight into chemical energy.many creatures have adapted to their green environments by taking on a green hue themselves as camouflage.several minerals have a green color, including the emerald, which is colored green by its chromium content.during post-classical and early modern europe, green was the color commonly associated with wealth, merchants, bankers, and the gentry, while red was reserved for the nobility.for this reason, the costume of the mona lisa by leonardo da vinci and the benches in the british house of commons are green while those in the house of lords are red.it also has a long historical tradition as the color of ireland and of gaelic culture.it is the historic color of islam, representing the lush vegetation of paradise.it was the color of the banner of muhammad, and is found in the flags of nearly all islamic countries.in surveys made in american, european, and islamic countries, green is the color most commonly associated with nature, life, health, youth, spring, hope, and envy.in the european union and the united states, green is also sometimes associated with toxicity and poor health, but in china and most of asia, its associations are very positive, as the symbol of fertility and happiness.because of its association with nature, it is the color of the environmental movement.
greece | leader | alexis tsipras
no related information
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | epoch | 2006-12-31
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | birthplace | manchester <tsp> alfred garth jones | birthyear | 1872
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | epoch | 2006-12-31
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 12 | backup pilot | alfred worden
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | birthplace | manchester <tsp> alfred garth jones | birthyear | 1872
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | escapevelocity | 002 kilometreperseconds
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | birthplace | manchester <tsp> alfred garth jones | birthyear | 1872
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it is evoked by light which has a dominant wavelength of roughly 495–570 nm.in subtractive color systems, used in painting and color printing, it is created by a combination of yellow and cyan; in the rgb color model, used on television and computer screens, it is one of the additive primary colors, along with red and blue, which are mixed in different combinations to create all other colors.by far the largest contributor to green in nature is chlorophyll, the chemical by which plants photosynthesize and convert sunlight into chemical energy.many creatures have adapted to their green environments by taking on a green hue themselves as camouflage.several minerals have a green color, including the emerald, which is colored green by its chromium content.during post-classical and early modern europe, green was the color commonly associated with wealth, merchants, bankers, and the gentry, while red was reserved for the nobility.for this reason, the costume of the mona lisa by leonardo da vinci and the benches in the british house of commons are green while those in the house of lords are red.it also has a long historical tradition as the color of ireland and of gaelic culture.it is the historic color of islam, representing the lush vegetation of paradise.it was the color of the banner of muhammad, and is found in the flags of nearly all islamic countries.in surveys made in american, european, and islamic countries, green is the color most commonly associated with nature, life, health, youth, spring, hope, and envy.in the european union and the united states, green is also sometimes associated with toxicity and poor health, but in china and most of asia, its associations are very positive, as the symbol of fertility and happiness.because of its association with nature, it is the color of the environmental movement.
unadaptively | unelucidating | skibobbing
no related information
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 12 | backup pilot | alfred worden
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | escapevelocity | 002 kilometreperseconds
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | birthplace | manchester <tsp> alfred garth jones | deathplace | sidcup
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | escapevelocity | 002 kilometreperseconds
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | birthplace | manchester <tsp> alfred garth jones | deathplace | sidcup
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 12 | backup pilot | alfred worden
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | formername | 1928 sj
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | birthplace | manchester <tsp> alfred garth jones | deathplace | sidcup
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it is evoked by light which has a dominant wavelength of roughly 495–570 nm.in subtractive color systems, used in painting and color printing, it is created by a combination of yellow and cyan; in the rgb color model, used on television and computer screens, it is one of the additive primary colors, along with red and blue, which are mixed in different combinations to create all other colors.by far the largest contributor to green in nature is chlorophyll, the chemical by which plants photosynthesize and convert sunlight into chemical energy.many creatures have adapted to their green environments by taking on a green hue themselves as camouflage.several minerals have a green color, including the emerald, which is colored green by its chromium content.during post-classical and early modern europe, green was the color commonly associated with wealth, merchants, bankers, and the gentry, while red was reserved for the nobility.for this reason, the costume of the mona lisa by leonardo da vinci and the benches in the british house of commons are green while those in the house of lords are red.it also has a long historical tradition as the color of ireland and of gaelic culture.it is the historic color of islam, representing the lush vegetation of paradise.it was the color of the banner of muhammad, and is found in the flags of nearly all islamic countries.in surveys made in american, european, and islamic countries, green is the color most commonly associated with nature, life, health, youth, spring, hope, and envy.in the european union and the united states, green is also sometimes associated with toxicity and poor health, but in china and most of asia, its associations are very positive, as the symbol of fertility and happiness.because of its association with nature, it is the color of the environmental movement.
hexagonical | organifier | clayen
no related information
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | formername | 1928 sj
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | birthplace | manchester <tsp> manchester | leadername | labour party uk
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it is evoked by light which has a dominant wavelength of roughly 495–570 nm.in subtractive color systems, used in painting and color printing, it is created by a combination of yellow and cyan; in the rgb color model, used on television and computer screens, it is one of the additive primary colors, along with red and blue, which are mixed in different combinations to create all other colors.by far the largest contributor to green in nature is chlorophyll, the chemical by which plants photosynthesize and convert sunlight into chemical energy.many creatures have adapted to their green environments by taking on a green hue themselves as camouflage.several minerals have a green color, including the emerald, which is colored green by its chromium content.during post-classical and early modern europe, green was the color commonly associated with wealth, merchants, bankers, and the gentry, while red was reserved for the nobility.for this reason, the costume of the mona lisa by leonardo da vinci and the benches in the british house of commons are green while those in the house of lords are red.it also has a long historical tradition as the color of ireland and of gaelic culture.it is the historic color of islam, representing the lush vegetation of paradise.it was the color of the banner of muhammad, and is found in the flags of nearly all islamic countries.in surveys made in american, european, and islamic countries, green is the color most commonly associated with nature, life, health, youth, spring, hope, and envy.in the european union and the united states, green is also sometimes associated with toxicity and poor health, but in china and most of asia, its associations are very positive, as the symbol of fertility and happiness.because of its association with nature, it is the color of the environmental movement.
greece | leader | prokopis pavlopoulos
no related information
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 12 | commander | david scott
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | formername | 1928 sj
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | birthplace | manchester <tsp> manchester | leadername | labour party uk
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it is evoked by light which has a dominant wavelength of roughly 495–570 nm.in subtractive color systems, used in painting and color printing, it is created by a combination of yellow and cyan; in the rgb color model, used on television and computer screens, it is one of the additive primary colors, along with red and blue, which are mixed in different combinations to create all other colors.by far the largest contributor to green in nature is chlorophyll, the chemical by which plants photosynthesize and convert sunlight into chemical energy.many creatures have adapted to their green environments by taking on a green hue themselves as camouflage.several minerals have a green color, including the emerald, which is colored green by its chromium content.during post-classical and early modern europe, green was the color commonly associated with wealth, merchants, bankers, and the gentry, while red was reserved for the nobility.for this reason, the costume of the mona lisa by leonardo da vinci and the benches in the british house of commons are green while those in the house of lords are red.it also has a long historical tradition as the color of ireland and of gaelic culture.it is the historic color of islam, representing the lush vegetation of paradise.it was the color of the banner of muhammad, and is found in the flags of nearly all islamic countries.in surveys made in american, european, and islamic countries, green is the color most commonly associated with nature, life, health, youth, spring, hope, and envy.in the european union and the united states, green is also sometimes associated with toxicity and poor health, but in china and most of asia, its associations are very positive, as the symbol of fertility and happiness.because of its association with nature, it is the color of the environmental movement.
greece | leader | prokopis pavlopoulos
no related information
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | mass | 57 kilograms
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | birthplace | manchester <tsp> manchester | leadername | labour party uk
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 12 | commander | david scott
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | mass | 57 kilograms
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | deathplace | london <tsp> alfred garth jones | birthplace | england
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it is evoked by light which has a dominant wavelength of roughly 495–570 nm.in subtractive color systems, used in painting and color printing, it is created by a combination of yellow and cyan; in the rgb color model, used on television and computer screens, it is one of the additive primary colors, along with red and blue, which are mixed in different combinations to create all other colors.by far the largest contributor to green in nature is chlorophyll, the chemical by which plants photosynthesize and convert sunlight into chemical energy.many creatures have adapted to their green environments by taking on a green hue themselves as camouflage.several minerals have a green color, including the emerald, which is colored green by its chromium content.during post-classical and early modern europe, green was the color commonly associated with wealth, merchants, bankers, and the gentry, while red was reserved for the nobility.for this reason, the costume of the mona lisa by leonardo da vinci and the benches in the british house of commons are green while those in the house of lords are red.it also has a long historical tradition as the color of ireland and of gaelic culture.it is the historic color of islam, representing the lush vegetation of paradise.it was the color of the banner of muhammad, and is found in the flags of nearly all islamic countries.in surveys made in american, european, and islamic countries, green is the color most commonly associated with nature, life, health, youth, spring, hope, and envy.in the european union and the united states, green is also sometimes associated with toxicity and poor health, but in china and most of asia, its associations are very positive, as the symbol of fertility and happiness.because of its association with nature, it is the color of the environmental movement.
greece | leader | prokopis pavlopoulos
no related information
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | orbitalperiod | 1833090000
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
it is located on the lowest slope of mt.ingino, a small mountain of the apennines.the hills above the town were already occupied in the bronze age.as ikuvium, it was an important town of the umbri in pre-roman times, made famous for the discovery there in 1444 of the iguvine tablets, a set of bronze tablets that together constitute the largest surviving text in the umbrian language.after the roman conquest in the 2nd century bc – it kept its name as iguvium – the city remained important, as attested by its roman theatre, the second-largest surviving in the world.gubbio became very powerful in the beginning of the middle ages.the town sent 1000 knights to fight in the first crusade under the lead of girolamo of the prominent gabrielli family, who according to an undocumented local tradition, they were the first to reach the church of the holy sepulchre when jerusalem was seized (1099).the following centuries in gubbio were turbulent, featuring wars against the neighboring towns of umbria.one of these wars saw the miraculous intervention of its bishop, ubald, who secured gubbio an overwhelming victory (1151) and a period of prosperity.in the struggles of guelphs and ghibellines, the gabrielli, such as the condottiero cante dei gabrielli (c. 1260–1335), fought for the guelph faction, supporting the papacy.as podestà of florence, cante exiled dante alighieri, ensuring his own lasting notoriety.in 1350 giovanni gabrielli, count of borgovalle seized power as the lord of gubbio.his rule was short, and he was forced to hand over the town to cardinal gil álvarez carrillo de albornoz, representing the papal states (1354).a few years later, gabriello gabrielli, the bishop of gubbio, also proclaimed himself lord of gubbio (signor d'agobbio).betrayed by a group of noblemen which included many of his relatives, the bishop was forced to leave the town and seek refuge at his home castle at cantiano.
gubbio | leaderparty | left ecology freedom
gubbio became very powerful in the beginning of the middle ages.the following centuries in gubbio were turbulent, featuring wars against the neighboring towns of umbria.one of these wars saw the miraculous intervention of its bishop, ubald, who secured gubbio an overwhelming victory (1151) and a period of prosperity.in 1350 giovanni gabrielli, count of borgovalle seized power as the lord of gubbio.a few years later, gabriello gabrielli, the bishop of gubbio, also proclaimed himself lord of gubbio (signor d'agobbio).
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
spiro | notopodial | pastorium
no related information
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
petitioned | potgun | germination
no related information
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
hemangiomata | pukeka | boehmenite
no related information
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | deathplace | london <tsp> alfred garth jones | birthplace | manchester
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 12 | operator | nasa
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
he is currently the head coach of the greece national football team.poyet played as a midfielder and began his career with short spells at grenoble and river plate.he then spent seven years at real zaragoza, with whom he won the copa del rey and the uefa cup winners' cup.in 1997, poyet moved to chelsea on a free transfer and helped the club win the fa cup and the uefa cup winners' cup.in 2001, he moved to tottenham hotspur, where he saw out the remainder of his career.he was also part of the uruguay side which won the 1995 copa américa.after his playing career ended, poyet moved into coaching.he served as assistant manager to dennis wise at swindon town and leeds united, and juande ramos at tottenham hotspur.in november 2009, poyet was appointed manager of brighton & hove albion and in his first full season led the club to promotion as league one champions, for which he was named league one manager of the year by the lma.in october 2013 he was hired by premier league team sunderland and guided them to the league cup final in his first season, but was sacked in march 2015 after a poor run of results.he later had spells at superleague greece side aek athens, la liga club real betis, chinese super league team shanghai shenhua, bordeaux of ligue 1, and universidad católica in chile, before being appointed as coach of greece in 2022.poyet moved to real zaragoza in 1990; winning the copa del rey in 1994 and the cup winners' cup a year later, beating arsenal in the final.he became zaragoza's longest-serving foreign player, and scored 60 goals in 240 games for the club.poyet joined chelsea on a free transfer in june 1997.
gus poyet | club | chelsea fc
poyet played as a midfielder and began his career with short spells at grenoble and river plate.in 1997, poyet moved to chelsea on a free transfer and helped the club win the fa cup and the uefa cup winners' cup.after his playing career ended, poyet moved into coaching.in november 2009, poyet was appointed manager of brighton & hove albion and in his first full season led the club to promotion as league one champions, for which he was named league one manager of the year by the lma.poyet moved to real zaragoza in 1990; winning the copa del rey in 1994 and the cup winners' cup a year later, beating arsenal in the final.poyet joined chelsea on a free transfer in june 1997.
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | temperature | 1550 kelvins
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | deathplace | london <tsp> alfred garth jones | birthplace | manchester
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
he is currently the head coach of the greece national football team.poyet played as a midfielder and began his career with short spells at grenoble and river plate.he then spent seven years at real zaragoza, with whom he won the copa del rey and the uefa cup winners' cup.in 1997, poyet moved to chelsea on a free transfer and helped the club win the fa cup and the uefa cup winners' cup.in 2001, he moved to tottenham hotspur, where he saw out the remainder of his career.he was also part of the uruguay side which won the 1995 copa américa.after his playing career ended, poyet moved into coaching.he served as assistant manager to dennis wise at swindon town and leeds united, and juande ramos at tottenham hotspur.in november 2009, poyet was appointed manager of brighton & hove albion and in his first full season led the club to promotion as league one champions, for which he was named league one manager of the year by the lma.in october 2013 he was hired by premier league team sunderland and guided them to the league cup final in his first season, but was sacked in march 2015 after a poor run of results.he later had spells at superleague greece side aek athens, la liga club real betis, chinese super league team shanghai shenhua, bordeaux of ligue 1, and universidad católica in chile, before being appointed as coach of greece in 2022.poyet moved to real zaragoza in 1990; winning the copa del rey in 1994 and the cup winners' cup a year later, beating arsenal in the final.he became zaragoza's longest-serving foreign player, and scored 60 goals in 240 games for the club.poyet joined chelsea on a free transfer in june 1997.
gus poyet | club | real zaragoza
poyet played as a midfielder and began his career with short spells at grenoble and river plate.in 1997, poyet moved to chelsea on a free transfer and helped the club win the fa cup and the uefa cup winners' cup.after his playing career ended, poyet moved into coaching.in november 2009, poyet was appointed manager of brighton & hove albion and in his first full season led the club to promotion as league one champions, for which he was named league one manager of the year by the lma.poyet moved to real zaragoza in 1990; winning the copa del rey in 1994 and the cup winners' cup a year later, beating arsenal in the final.poyet joined chelsea on a free transfer in june 1997.
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | temperature | 1550 kelvins
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | deathplace | london <tsp> alfred garth jones | deathplace | sidcup
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 12 | operator | nasa
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
he is currently the head coach of the greece national football team.poyet played as a midfielder and began his career with short spells at grenoble and river plate.he then spent seven years at real zaragoza, with whom he won the copa del rey and the uefa cup winners' cup.in 1997, poyet moved to chelsea on a free transfer and helped the club win the fa cup and the uefa cup winners' cup.in 2001, he moved to tottenham hotspur, where he saw out the remainder of his career.he was also part of the uruguay side which won the 1995 copa américa.after his playing career ended, poyet moved into coaching.he served as assistant manager to dennis wise at swindon town and leeds united, and juande ramos at tottenham hotspur.in november 2009, poyet was appointed manager of brighton & hove albion and in his first full season led the club to promotion as league one champions, for which he was named league one manager of the year by the lma.in october 2013 he was hired by premier league team sunderland and guided them to the league cup final in his first season, but was sacked in march 2015 after a poor run of results.he later had spells at superleague greece side aek athens, la liga club real betis, chinese super league team shanghai shenhua, bordeaux of ligue 1, and universidad católica in chile, before being appointed as coach of greece in 2022.poyet moved to real zaragoza in 1990; winning the copa del rey in 1994 and the cup winners' cup a year later, beating arsenal in the final.he became zaragoza's longest-serving foreign player, and scored 60 goals in 240 games for the club.poyet joined chelsea on a free transfer in june 1997.
gus poyet | club | real zaragoza
poyet played as a midfielder and began his career with short spells at grenoble and river plate.in 1997, poyet moved to chelsea on a free transfer and helped the club win the fa cup and the uefa cup winners' cup.after his playing career ended, poyet moved into coaching.in november 2009, poyet was appointed manager of brighton & hove albion and in his first full season led the club to promotion as league one champions, for which he was named league one manager of the year by the lma.poyet moved to real zaragoza in 1990; winning the copa del rey in 1994 and the cup winners' cup a year later, beating arsenal in the final.poyet joined chelsea on a free transfer in june 1997.
it was discovered on 22 september 1928, by german astronomer karl reinmuth at the heidelberg-königstuhl state observatory in southwest germany, and assigned the provisional designation 1928 sj.it was named for the flowering plant clematis.the presumably carbonaceous asteroid has a relatively long rotation period of 34.3 hours.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.all members have a relatively high orbital inclination.it orbits the sun in the outermost asteroid belt at a distance of 3.0–3.5 au once every 5 years and 10 months (2,120 days; semi-major axis of 3.23 au).its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 21° with respect to the ecliptic.the body's observation arc begins with its observation as 1963 tg1 at goethe link observatory in october 1963, more than 35 years after its official discovery observation at heidelberg.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.lightcurve analysis gave a synodic rotation period of 34.3 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.16 magnitude (u=2), which significantly differs from previously reported periods of 6 to 12.68 hours (u=1/2/2/2).while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.the official naming citation was mentioned in the names of the minor planets by paul herget in 1955 (h n.a.).the list covered his discoveries with numbers between (1009) and (1200).this list also contained a sequence of 28 asteroids, starting with 1054 forsytia, that were all named after plants, in particular flowering plants (also see list of minor planets named after animals and plants).
1101 clematis | temperature | 1550 kelvins
it was named for the flowering plant clematis.: 23  according to a different study, this object is also the namesake of the clematis family, a small family of 5–16 asteroids hence they may have arisen from the same collisional event.: 23  === rotation period === in september 2009, a rotational lightcurve of clematis was obtained from photometric observations by american astronomers brian warner at the palmer divide observatory, colorado, and by robert stephens at gmars (g79, california.while not being a slow rotator, clematis has a much longer period than that known for most other asteroids, and its small amplitude is indicative for a rather spheroidal shape.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | deathplace | london <tsp> alfred garth jones | deathplace | sidcup
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
he is currently the head coach of the greece national football team.poyet played as a midfielder and began his career with short spells at grenoble and river plate.he then spent seven years at real zaragoza, with whom he won the copa del rey and the uefa cup winners' cup.in 1997, poyet moved to chelsea on a free transfer and helped the club win the fa cup and the uefa cup winners' cup.in 2001, he moved to tottenham hotspur, where he saw out the remainder of his career.he was also part of the uruguay side which won the 1995 copa américa.after his playing career ended, poyet moved into coaching.he served as assistant manager to dennis wise at swindon town and leeds united, and juande ramos at tottenham hotspur.in november 2009, poyet was appointed manager of brighton & hove albion and in his first full season led the club to promotion as league one champions, for which he was named league one manager of the year by the lma.in october 2013 he was hired by premier league team sunderland and guided them to the league cup final in his first season, but was sacked in march 2015 after a poor run of results.he later had spells at superleague greece side aek athens, la liga club real betis, chinese super league team shanghai shenhua, bordeaux of ligue 1, and universidad católica in chile, before being appointed as coach of greece in 2022.poyet moved to real zaragoza in 1990; winning the copa del rey in 1994 and the cup winners' cup a year later, beating arsenal in the final.he became zaragoza's longest-serving foreign player, and scored 60 goals in 240 games for the club.poyet joined chelsea on a free transfer in june 1997.
gus poyet | club | real zaragoza
poyet played as a midfielder and began his career with short spells at grenoble and river plate.in 1997, poyet moved to chelsea on a free transfer and helped the club win the fa cup and the uefa cup winners' cup.after his playing career ended, poyet moved into coaching.in november 2009, poyet was appointed manager of brighton & hove albion and in his first full season led the club to promotion as league one champions, for which he was named league one manager of the year by the lma.poyet moved to real zaragoza in 1990; winning the copa del rey in 1994 and the cup winners' cup a year later, beating arsenal in the final.poyet joined chelsea on a free transfer in june 1997.
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 12 | operator | nasa
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?'sedan and wagon models 'offered excellent value and were fairly popular' cars.matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.they outperformed most other cars and 'was adopted as the official police car.'matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
amc matador | alternativename | rambler matador
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | deathplace | london <tsp> london | leadername | boris johnson
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.observations made during 1958–1959 at the mcdonald observatory and in 1969 at the kitt peak national observatory found an uneven light curve with a period of 10.9267 hours.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.they obtained a period of 10.92580 hours, with the brightness varying by no more than 0.2 in magnitude.in the tholen classification system, it is categorized as an m-type asteroid, while the bus asteroid taxonomy system lists it as an xk asteroid.absorption features in the near infrared are attributed to low-iron, low-calcium orthopyroxene minerals.water content on the surface is estimated at 0.14–0.27 by mass fraction (wt%).measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
110 lydia | apoapsis | 4407560000 kilometres
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | deathplace | london <tsp> london | leadername | boris johnson
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?'sedan and wagon models 'offered excellent value and were fairly popular' cars.matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.they outperformed most other cars and 'was adopted as the official police car.'matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
amc matador | alternativename | rambler matador
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.observations made during 1958–1959 at the mcdonald observatory and in 1969 at the kitt peak national observatory found an uneven light curve with a period of 10.9267 hours.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.they obtained a period of 10.92580 hours, with the brightness varying by no more than 0.2 in magnitude.in the tholen classification system, it is categorized as an m-type asteroid, while the bus asteroid taxonomy system lists it as an xk asteroid.absorption features in the near infrared are attributed to low-iron, low-calcium orthopyroxene minerals.water content on the surface is estimated at 0.14–0.27 by mass fraction (wt%).measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
110 lydia | apoapsis | 4407560000 kilometres
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 12 | operator | nasa
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | deathplace | london <tsp> london | leadername | boris johnson
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.observations made during 1958–1959 at the mcdonald observatory and in 1969 at the kitt peak national observatory found an uneven light curve with a period of 10.9267 hours.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.they obtained a period of 10.92580 hours, with the brightness varying by no more than 0.2 in magnitude.in the tholen classification system, it is categorized as an m-type asteroid, while the bus asteroid taxonomy system lists it as an xk asteroid.absorption features in the near infrared are attributed to low-iron, low-calcium orthopyroxene minerals.water content on the surface is estimated at 0.14–0.27 by mass fraction (wt%).measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
110 lydia | averagespeed | 1799 kilometreperseconds
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?'sedan and wagon models 'offered excellent value and were fairly popular' cars.matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.they outperformed most other cars and 'was adopted as the official police car.'matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
amc matador | alternativename | vam classic
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | deathplace | london <tsp> london | leadertitle | european parliament
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 8 | commander | frank borman
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | deathplace | london <tsp> london | leadertitle | european parliament
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | deathplace | london <tsp> london | leadertitle | european parliament
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 8 | commander | frank borman
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.observations made during 1958–1959 at the mcdonald observatory and in 1969 at the kitt peak national observatory found an uneven light curve with a period of 10.9267 hours.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.they obtained a period of 10.92580 hours, with the brightness varying by no more than 0.2 in magnitude.in the tholen classification system, it is categorized as an m-type asteroid, while the bus asteroid taxonomy system lists it as an xk asteroid.absorption features in the near infrared are attributed to low-iron, low-calcium orthopyroxene minerals.water content on the surface is estimated at 0.14–0.27 by mass fraction (wt%).measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
reantagonizing | tramel | metaphysicous
no related information
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?'sedan and wagon models 'offered excellent value and were fairly popular' cars.matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.they outperformed most other cars and 'was adopted as the official police car.'matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
hostle | complemented | conchite
no related information
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | professionalfield | illustration <tsp> alfred garth jones | birthplace | manchester
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.observations made during 1958–1959 at the mcdonald observatory and in 1969 at the kitt peak national observatory found an uneven light curve with a period of 10.9267 hours.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.they obtained a period of 10.92580 hours, with the brightness varying by no more than 0.2 in magnitude.in the tholen classification system, it is categorized as an m-type asteroid, while the bus asteroid taxonomy system lists it as an xk asteroid.absorption features in the near infrared are attributed to low-iron, low-calcium orthopyroxene minerals.water content on the surface is estimated at 0.14–0.27 by mass fraction (wt%).measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
110 lydia | averagespeed | 1799 kilometreperseconds
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 8 | commander | frank borman
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | professionalfield | illustration <tsp> alfred garth jones | birthplace | manchester
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.observations made during 1958–1959 at the mcdonald observatory and in 1969 at the kitt peak national observatory found an uneven light curve with a period of 10.9267 hours.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.they obtained a period of 10.92580 hours, with the brightness varying by no more than 0.2 in magnitude.in the tholen classification system, it is categorized as an m-type asteroid, while the bus asteroid taxonomy system lists it as an xk asteroid.absorption features in the near infrared are attributed to low-iron, low-calcium orthopyroxene minerals.water content on the surface is estimated at 0.14–0.27 by mass fraction (wt%).measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
110 lydia | discoverer | alphonse borrelly
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?'sedan and wagon models 'offered excellent value and were fairly popular' cars.matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.they outperformed most other cars and 'was adopted as the official police car.'matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
amc matador | alternativename | vam classic
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.it seems that within a few years he had moved to london in order to advance his career in the arts.this was most probably in order to become a student at the national art training school in south kensington, an institution that would become the royal college of art in 1896.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.he then extended his studies in paris at the académie julian where he was directed by jean-joseph benjamin-constant and jean-paul laurens, before returning to england in 1894.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).by the time of the united kingdom census 1901 the couple were living on the king's road, chelsea.in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.the census of that year records that harriette had by this time given birth to two children.
alfred garth jones | professionalfield | illustration <tsp> alfred garth jones | birthplace | manchester
at that time, thomas jones was a mechanical draughtsman although he later progressed to become an engineering lecturer.in the united kingdom census 1881, alfred is listed (aged 8) with the rest of his family (ada, mary, thomas, alfred, ernest, robert, maud and later percy) which was resident in moss side, then a manchester suburb.at age 18, alfred was still living with his parents and was studying art in manchester.the march 1901 edition of the poster and art collector publication included an article entitled 'some remarks on the work of alfred garth jones' (by the editor).this describes how jones continued his training by attending the slade school of fine art as a pupil of professor fred brown.on 15 december 1898 alfred married harriette napier osborne (a farmer's daughter b 10 december 1875 in marden, kent) at the parish church (now chelsea old church) in the parish of st. luke, chelsea, london.the ceremony was attended by alfred's father, thomas, and by harriette's mother, lydia napier osborne (née hardy).in 1911, alfred and harriette were living in wandsworth with their 5-year-old daughter, barbara garth jones.
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.observations made during 1958–1959 at the mcdonald observatory and in 1969 at the kitt peak national observatory found an uneven light curve with a period of 10.9267 hours.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.they obtained a period of 10.92580 hours, with the brightness varying by no more than 0.2 in magnitude.in the tholen classification system, it is categorized as an m-type asteroid, while the bus asteroid taxonomy system lists it as an xk asteroid.absorption features in the near infrared are attributed to low-iron, low-calcium orthopyroxene minerals.water content on the surface is estimated at 0.14–0.27 by mass fraction (wt%).measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
110 lydia | discoverer | alphonse borrelly
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?'sedan and wagon models 'offered excellent value and were fairly popular' cars.matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.they outperformed most other cars and 'was adopted as the official police car.'matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
amc matador | assembly | australia
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
plasticisation | orgyia | endocrinological
no related information
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.observations made during 1958–1959 at the mcdonald observatory and in 1969 at the kitt peak national observatory found an uneven light curve with a period of 10.9267 hours.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.they obtained a period of 10.92580 hours, with the brightness varying by no more than 0.2 in magnitude.in the tholen classification system, it is categorized as an m-type asteroid, while the bus asteroid taxonomy system lists it as an xk asteroid.absorption features in the near infrared are attributed to low-iron, low-calcium orthopyroxene minerals.water content on the surface is estimated at 0.14–0.27 by mass fraction (wt%).measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
110 lydia | escapevelocity | 00455 kilometreperseconds
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
he specialized in uruguayan and argentinean folk genres such as zamba and milonga, and he became a chief figure in the nueva canción movement in his country.a staunch supporter of communist ideals, he lived in exile between 1976 and 1984.he is widely regarded as one of the most influential singer-songwriters of latin america.shortly after being born, blanca handed over her son to be raised by carlos durán, a man of many trades, and his wife, doraisella carbajal, then employed at the council for children, becoming alfredo 'pocho' durán.they lived in several cities neighbourhoods, and moved between 1944 and the end of 1947, they moved to the town of santiago vázquez.they frequently visited the countryside near trinidad, capital city of the flores department, where alfredo's adoptive mother was born.this childhood experience stayed with him forever, notably in his repertoire, the majority of which contains rhythms and songs of peasant origin, mainly milongas.alfredo briefly returned with his adoptive family, to montevideo and in early adolescence, moved on to live with his biological mother and her husband, the argentine alfredo nicolás zitarrosa, who would eventually give him his surname.together with his newborn sister, they lived in the area now known as rincón de la bolsa, at km.29.50 of the old route to colonia, san josé department.based there, he commuted to study at the high school in montevideo, where he eventually moved into his early youth.first he lived with the duráns and then in mrs. ema's pension, located at colonia and medanos (today barrios amorín) streets, to fill after the famous attic of the house which was used as a pension and was owned by blanca iribarne, his mother, located on yaguarón street (today aquiles lanza) 1021, in front of the plaza currently bearing his name nearby the central cemetery.
alfredo zitarrosa | birthplace | montevideo <tsp> montevideo | leadername | daniel martínez politician
shortly after being born, blanca handed over her son to be raised by carlos durán, a man of many trades, and his wife, doraisella carbajal, then employed at the council for children, becoming alfredo 'pocho' durán.they frequently visited the countryside near trinidad, capital city of the flores department, where alfredo's adoptive mother was born.alfredo briefly returned with his adoptive family, to montevideo and in early adolescence, moved on to live with his biological mother and her husband, the argentine alfredo nicolás zitarrosa, who would eventually give him his surname.based there, he commuted to study at the high school in montevideo, where he eventually moved into his early youth.
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?'sedan and wagon models 'offered excellent value and were fairly popular' cars.matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.they outperformed most other cars and 'was adopted as the official police car.'matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
amc matador | assembly | mexico
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
in 2009, he founded raptor group, a private investment company.prior to forming raptor, pallotta was vice chairman at tudor investment corporation.he was co-owner and chairman of the italian football club a.s. roma from 2011 to 2020; co-owner and executive board member of the national basketball association's boston celtics, and co-owner of esports franchise fnatic.along with sisters carla and christine pallotta, he was raised in boston's italian north end neighborhood.his sisters own and operate nebo cucina & enoteca in boston's financial district.pallotta earned a bba at university of massachusetts amherst and an mba at northeastern university.raptor focuses on various industries including sports, consumer, technology, media, entertainment, and financial services.during pallotta’s ownership, the club would primarily engage in capitalizing on the sale of its players, leading as roma to obtain over half a billion in capital gains on player trading operations, which earned pallotta the nickname of “king of capital gains”.this financial approach to football, coupled with one of as roma's longest period without winning any trophies, as well as what many considered an undeserved dismissal of as roma icons francesco totti and daniele de rossi, lead to a serious clash with the fans and the only worldwide protest in as roma history, with disapproving banners in several remote parts of the world.in december 2019, pallotta was in final negotiations to sell the team for $872 million, to american businessman dan friedkin.in august 2020, friedkin signed the preliminary contract to agree to pay $591 million to pallotta, the main shareholder of roma.as the club's balance sheets later revealed, as roma had tremendous debt and seriously risked bankruptcy before having to be transferred to a new ownership in 2020.pallotta serves on the board of directors for new profit inc. as well as the board of advisors for tulco, llc.
james pallotta | birthplace | boston
prior to forming raptor, pallotta was vice chairman at tudor investment corporation.along with sisters carla and christine pallotta, he was raised in boston's italian north end neighborhood.pallotta earned a bba at university of massachusetts amherst and an mba at northeastern university.during pallotta’s ownership, the club would primarily engage in capitalizing on the sale of its players, leading as roma to obtain over half a billion in capital gains on player trading operations, which earned pallotta the nickname of “king of capital gains”.this financial approach to football, coupled with one of as roma's longest period without winning any trophies, as well as what many considered an undeserved dismissal of as roma icons francesco totti and daniele de rossi, lead to a serious clash with the fans and the only worldwide protest in as roma history, with disapproving banners in several remote parts of the world.in december 2019, pallotta was in final negotiations to sell the team for $872 million, to american businessman dan friedkin.in august 2020, friedkin signed the preliminary contract to agree to pay $591 million to pallotta, the main shareholder of roma.pallotta serves on the board of directors for new profit inc. as well as the board of advisors for tulco, llc.
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.observations made during 1958–1959 at the mcdonald observatory and in 1969 at the kitt peak national observatory found an uneven light curve with a period of 10.9267 hours.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.they obtained a period of 10.92580 hours, with the brightness varying by no more than 0.2 in magnitude.in the tholen classification system, it is categorized as an m-type asteroid, while the bus asteroid taxonomy system lists it as an xk asteroid.absorption features in the near infrared are attributed to low-iron, low-calcium orthopyroxene minerals.water content on the surface is estimated at 0.14–0.27 by mass fraction (wt%).measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
110 lydia | escapevelocity | 00455 kilometreperseconds
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
in 2009, he founded raptor group, a private investment company.prior to forming raptor, pallotta was vice chairman at tudor investment corporation.he was co-owner and chairman of the italian football club a.s. roma from 2011 to 2020; co-owner and executive board member of the national basketball association's boston celtics, and co-owner of esports franchise fnatic.along with sisters carla and christine pallotta, he was raised in boston's italian north end neighborhood.his sisters own and operate nebo cucina & enoteca in boston's financial district.pallotta earned a bba at university of massachusetts amherst and an mba at northeastern university.raptor focuses on various industries including sports, consumer, technology, media, entertainment, and financial services.during pallotta’s ownership, the club would primarily engage in capitalizing on the sale of its players, leading as roma to obtain over half a billion in capital gains on player trading operations, which earned pallotta the nickname of “king of capital gains”.this financial approach to football, coupled with one of as roma's longest period without winning any trophies, as well as what many considered an undeserved dismissal of as roma icons francesco totti and daniele de rossi, lead to a serious clash with the fans and the only worldwide protest in as roma history, with disapproving banners in several remote parts of the world.in december 2019, pallotta was in final negotiations to sell the team for $872 million, to american businessman dan friedkin.in august 2020, friedkin signed the preliminary contract to agree to pay $591 million to pallotta, the main shareholder of roma.as the club's balance sheets later revealed, as roma had tremendous debt and seriously risked bankruptcy before having to be transferred to a new ownership in 2020.pallotta serves on the board of directors for new profit inc. as well as the board of advisors for tulco, llc.
james pallotta | birthplace | boston
prior to forming raptor, pallotta was vice chairman at tudor investment corporation.along with sisters carla and christine pallotta, he was raised in boston's italian north end neighborhood.pallotta earned a bba at university of massachusetts amherst and an mba at northeastern university.during pallotta’s ownership, the club would primarily engage in capitalizing on the sale of its players, leading as roma to obtain over half a billion in capital gains on player trading operations, which earned pallotta the nickname of “king of capital gains”.this financial approach to football, coupled with one of as roma's longest period without winning any trophies, as well as what many considered an undeserved dismissal of as roma icons francesco totti and daniele de rossi, lead to a serious clash with the fans and the only worldwide protest in as roma history, with disapproving banners in several remote parts of the world.in december 2019, pallotta was in final negotiations to sell the team for $872 million, to american businessman dan friedkin.in august 2020, friedkin signed the preliminary contract to agree to pay $591 million to pallotta, the main shareholder of roma.pallotta serves on the board of directors for new profit inc. as well as the board of advisors for tulco, llc.
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.observations made during 1958–1959 at the mcdonald observatory and in 1969 at the kitt peak national observatory found an uneven light curve with a period of 10.9267 hours.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.they obtained a period of 10.92580 hours, with the brightness varying by no more than 0.2 in magnitude.in the tholen classification system, it is categorized as an m-type asteroid, while the bus asteroid taxonomy system lists it as an xk asteroid.absorption features in the near infrared are attributed to low-iron, low-calcium orthopyroxene minerals.water content on the surface is estimated at 0.14–0.27 by mass fraction (wt%).measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
110 lydia | mass | 67 kilograms
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
euhemerism | pantascope | gekkones
no related information
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.observations made during 1958–1959 at the mcdonald observatory and in 1969 at the kitt peak national observatory found an uneven light curve with a period of 10.9267 hours.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.they obtained a period of 10.92580 hours, with the brightness varying by no more than 0.2 in magnitude.in the tholen classification system, it is categorized as an m-type asteroid, while the bus asteroid taxonomy system lists it as an xk asteroid.absorption features in the near infrared are attributed to low-iron, low-calcium orthopyroxene minerals.water content on the surface is estimated at 0.14–0.27 by mass fraction (wt%).measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
110 lydia | mass | 67 kilograms
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
he specialized in uruguayan and argentinean folk genres such as zamba and milonga, and he became a chief figure in the nueva canción movement in his country.a staunch supporter of communist ideals, he lived in exile between 1976 and 1984.he is widely regarded as one of the most influential singer-songwriters of latin america.shortly after being born, blanca handed over her son to be raised by carlos durán, a man of many trades, and his wife, doraisella carbajal, then employed at the council for children, becoming alfredo 'pocho' durán.they lived in several cities neighbourhoods, and moved between 1944 and the end of 1947, they moved to the town of santiago vázquez.they frequently visited the countryside near trinidad, capital city of the flores department, where alfredo's adoptive mother was born.this childhood experience stayed with him forever, notably in his repertoire, the majority of which contains rhythms and songs of peasant origin, mainly milongas.alfredo briefly returned with his adoptive family, to montevideo and in early adolescence, moved on to live with his biological mother and her husband, the argentine alfredo nicolás zitarrosa, who would eventually give him his surname.together with his newborn sister, they lived in the area now known as rincón de la bolsa, at km.29.50 of the old route to colonia, san josé department.based there, he commuted to study at the high school in montevideo, where he eventually moved into his early youth.first he lived with the duráns and then in mrs. ema's pension, located at colonia and medanos (today barrios amorín) streets, to fill after the famous attic of the house which was used as a pension and was owned by blanca iribarne, his mother, located on yaguarón street (today aquiles lanza) 1021, in front of the plaza currently bearing his name nearby the central cemetery.
ravage | actium | disparpling
no related information
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 8 | crewmembers | frank borman
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
liga manager of the season: 2017–18 == references == == external links == jens härtel at fussballdaten.de (in german) jens härtel at worldfootball.net
jens härtel | club | 1 fc lokomotive leipzig
liga manager of the season: 2017–18 == references == == external links == jens härtel at fussballdaten.de (in german) jens härtel at worldfootball.net
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?'sedan and wagon models 'offered excellent value and were fairly popular' cars.matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.they outperformed most other cars and 'was adopted as the official police car.'matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
putridness | uphang | hashes
no related information
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.observations made during 1958–1959 at the mcdonald observatory and in 1969 at the kitt peak national observatory found an uneven light curve with a period of 10.9267 hours.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.they obtained a period of 10.92580 hours, with the brightness varying by no more than 0.2 in magnitude.in the tholen classification system, it is categorized as an m-type asteroid, while the bus asteroid taxonomy system lists it as an xk asteroid.absorption features in the near infrared are attributed to low-iron, low-calcium orthopyroxene minerals.water content on the surface is estimated at 0.14–0.27 by mass fraction (wt%).measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
110 lydia | orbitalperiod | 1426030000
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
he specialized in uruguayan and argentinean folk genres such as zamba and milonga, and he became a chief figure in the nueva canción movement in his country.a staunch supporter of communist ideals, he lived in exile between 1976 and 1984.he is widely regarded as one of the most influential singer-songwriters of latin america.shortly after being born, blanca handed over her son to be raised by carlos durán, a man of many trades, and his wife, doraisella carbajal, then employed at the council for children, becoming alfredo 'pocho' durán.they lived in several cities neighbourhoods, and moved between 1944 and the end of 1947, they moved to the town of santiago vázquez.they frequently visited the countryside near trinidad, capital city of the flores department, where alfredo's adoptive mother was born.this childhood experience stayed with him forever, notably in his repertoire, the majority of which contains rhythms and songs of peasant origin, mainly milongas.alfredo briefly returned with his adoptive family, to montevideo and in early adolescence, moved on to live with his biological mother and her husband, the argentine alfredo nicolás zitarrosa, who would eventually give him his surname.together with his newborn sister, they lived in the area now known as rincón de la bolsa, at km.29.50 of the old route to colonia, san josé department.based there, he commuted to study at the high school in montevideo, where he eventually moved into his early youth.first he lived with the duráns and then in mrs. ema's pension, located at colonia and medanos (today barrios amorín) streets, to fill after the famous attic of the house which was used as a pension and was owned by blanca iribarne, his mother, located on yaguarón street (today aquiles lanza) 1021, in front of the plaza currently bearing his name nearby the central cemetery.
alfredo zitarrosa | birthplace | montevideo <tsp> montevideo | leadername | daniel martínez politician
shortly after being born, blanca handed over her son to be raised by carlos durán, a man of many trades, and his wife, doraisella carbajal, then employed at the council for children, becoming alfredo 'pocho' durán.they frequently visited the countryside near trinidad, capital city of the flores department, where alfredo's adoptive mother was born.alfredo briefly returned with his adoptive family, to montevideo and in early adolescence, moved on to live with his biological mother and her husband, the argentine alfredo nicolás zitarrosa, who would eventually give him his surname.based there, he commuted to study at the high school in montevideo, where he eventually moved into his early youth.
liga manager of the season: 2017–18 == references == == external links == jens härtel at fussballdaten.de (in german) jens härtel at worldfootball.net
jens härtel | club | 1 fc lokomotive leipzig
liga manager of the season: 2017–18 == references == == external links == jens härtel at fussballdaten.de (in german) jens härtel at worldfootball.net
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at cape kennedy air force station launch complex 34 on january 27 killed all three crew members—command pilot gus grissom, senior pilot ed white, and pilot roger b. chaffee—and destroyed the command module (cm).the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.immediately after the fire, nasa convened an accident review board to determine the cause of the fire, and both chambers of the united states congress conducted their own committee inquiries to oversee nasa's investigation.the ignition source of the fire was determined to be electrical, and the fire spread rapidly due to combustible nylon material and the high-pressure pure oxygen cabin atmosphere.rescue was prevented by the plug door hatch, which could not be opened against the internal pressure of the cabin.because the rocket was unfueled, the test had not been considered hazardous, and emergency preparedness for it was poor.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.despite congressional displeasure at nasa's lack of openness, both congressional committees ruled that the issues raised in the report had no bearing on the accident.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.however, the development and uncrewed testing of the lunar module (lm) and saturn v rocket continued.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
apollo 8 | crewmembers | frank borman
it was planned to launch on february 21, 1967, as the first low earth orbital test of the apollo command and service module.the name apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by nasa in their honor after the fire.during the congressional investigation, senator walter mondale publicly revealed a nasa internal document citing problems with prime apollo contractor north american aviation, which became known as the phillips report.this disclosure embarrassed nasa administrator james e. webb, who was unaware of the document's existence, and attracted controversy to the apollo program.crewed apollo flights were suspended for twenty months while the command module's hazards were addressed.the saturn ib launch vehicle for apollo 1, sa-204, was used for the first lm test flight, apollo 5.
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.observations made during 1958–1959 at the mcdonald observatory and in 1969 at the kitt peak national observatory found an uneven light curve with a period of 10.9267 hours.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.they obtained a period of 10.92580 hours, with the brightness varying by no more than 0.2 in magnitude.in the tholen classification system, it is categorized as an m-type asteroid, while the bus asteroid taxonomy system lists it as an xk asteroid.absorption features in the near infrared are attributed to low-iron, low-calcium orthopyroxene minerals.water content on the surface is estimated at 0.14–0.27 by mass fraction (wt%).measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
110 lydia | orbitalperiod | 1426030000
it was discovered by french astronomer alphonse borrelly on 19 april 1870 and was named for lydia, the asia minor country populated by phrygians.the lydia family of asteroids is named after it.in the late 1990s, a network of astronomers worldwide used light curves to derive spin states and shape models of 10 new asteroids, including (110) lydia.measurements of the thermal inertia of 110 lydia give a value between 70 and 200 j·m−2·k−1·s−1/2, compared to 50 for lunar regolith and 400 for coarse sand in an atmosphere.it is a likely interloper in the padua family of minor planets that share similar dynamic properties.lydia occulted a dim star on 18 september 1999.
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?'sedan and wagon models 'offered excellent value and were fairly popular' cars.matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.they outperformed most other cars and 'was adopted as the official police car.'matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.
amc matador | assembly | usa
the first generation matador was focused on the 'family' market segment and was also offered in performance versions as highlighted in the nascar racing series with factory support from 1972 through 1975.with its second generation, the matador became amc's largest automobile after the ambassador, which shared the same platform, was discontinued after the 1974 model year.premium trim levels of the second generation matador coupe were marketed as the barcelona and oleg cassini (after the noted fashion designer) positioning the coupe in the personal luxury segment.the matador was fairly popular as a police car in the united states, and several television series featured matadors in prominent roles.abroad, matadors were also marketed under the rambler marque and were assembled under license in costa rica, mexico by vehículos automotores mexicanos (vam), and australia by australian motor industries (ami).matadors were also marketed in overseas markets that included exports of right-hand drive versions to the uk.with a facelift and a new name, the amc matadors were available as a two-door hardtop, four-door sedan, and station wagon body styles.the matador shared a modified platform with the full-size ambassador line with a shorter wheelbase.although related directly to the previous rebel models, amc began promoting the matador as more than a change in name with a slight facelift, to reposition the line in the highly competitive intermediate-car segment among consumers.the advertising campaign was built around the question 'what's a matador?matadors were also offered to fleet buyers with various police, taxicab, and other heavy-duty packages.matadors became popular with government agencies and military units as well as police departments in the u.s. and the sedans and wagons were typically equipped with 360 cu in (5.9 l) or 401 cu in (6.6 l) v8 engines.