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aaron boogaard (born august 11, 1986) is a former professional ice hockey player who most recently played for the wichita thunder of the echl.he signed a three-year entry level contract with the pittsburgh penguins on april 23, 2007.he spent the majority of the 2007–08 season with the wheeling nailers, the penguins' echl affiliate, appearing in only two games with wilkes-barre/scranton.boogaard appeared in 41 games for wilkes-barre/scranton during the following season.after being cleared of his charges connected to the death of his brother, boogaard was offered a chance to continue his professional hockey career by receiving a training camp invite to the houston aeros, the ahl affiliate of the minnesota wild.aeros general manager jim mill has mentioned that boogaard may be signed to a two-way contract between the aeros and a team in the echl or central hockey league.he was charged with the unlawful distribution of a controlled substance, oxycodone, and with interfering with a crime scene for misleading the coroner or concealing evidence in the death of his brother, derek boogaard.on october 6, 2011, hennepin county district judge william howard said the facts of the case didn't support the charge, being that aaron did not buy the pills, and dismissed the felony charge of unlawful distribution of a controlled substance against boogaard.boogaard would later plea guilty to interfering with the scene of a death.as a result of boogaard's guilty plea, he received two years probation and eighty hours community service (which must be completed within the next year.)while the emphasis in the camp does cover fighting, boogaard has countered by saying that with the league becoming bigger, stronger, and faster, the camp focuses with safety on the ice and how a player would defend themselves in the event of a fight.he is the brother of the late derek boogaard, who had also spent the majority of his career with the minnesota wild.aaron boogaard had his first child in 2019.
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aaron boogaard | height | 1905 <tsp> aaron boogaard | club | wichita thunder <tsp> aaron boogaard | birthplace | saskatchewan
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aaron boogaard (born august 11, 1986) is a former professional ice hockey player who most recently played for the wichita thunder of the echl.
|
aaron boogaard (born august 11, 1986) is a former professional ice hockey player who most recently played for the wichita thunder of the echl.he signed a three-year entry level contract with the pittsburgh penguins on april 23, 2007.he spent the majority of the 2007–08 season with the wheeling nailers, the penguins' echl affiliate, appearing in only two games with wilkes-barre/scranton.boogaard appeared in 41 games for wilkes-barre/scranton during the following season.after being cleared of his charges connected to the death of his brother, boogaard was offered a chance to continue his professional hockey career by receiving a training camp invite to the houston aeros, the ahl affiliate of the minnesota wild.aeros general manager jim mill has mentioned that boogaard may be signed to a two-way contract between the aeros and a team in the echl or central hockey league.he was charged with the unlawful distribution of a controlled substance, oxycodone, and with interfering with a crime scene for misleading the coroner or concealing evidence in the death of his brother, derek boogaard.on october 6, 2011, hennepin county district judge william howard said the facts of the case didn't support the charge, being that aaron did not buy the pills, and dismissed the felony charge of unlawful distribution of a controlled substance against boogaard.boogaard would later plea guilty to interfering with the scene of a death.as a result of boogaard's guilty plea, he received two years probation and eighty hours community service (which must be completed within the next year.)while the emphasis in the camp does cover fighting, boogaard has countered by saying that with the league becoming bigger, stronger, and faster, the camp focuses with safety on the ice and how a player would defend themselves in the event of a fight.he is the brother of the late derek boogaard, who had also spent the majority of his career with the minnesota wild.aaron boogaard had his first child in 2019.
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aaron boogaard | height | 1905 <tsp> aaron boogaard | club | wichita thunder <tsp> aaron boogaard | birthplace | saskatchewan
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aaron boogaard (born august 11, 1986) is a former professional ice hockey player who most recently played for the wichita thunder of the echl.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | adams township madison county indiana <tsp> adams township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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antares (), known during early development as taurus ii, is an expendable launch system developed by orbital sciences corporation (now part of northrop grumman) and the pivdenne design bureau to launch the cygnus spacecraft to the international space station as part of nasa's cots and crs programs.able to launch payloads heavier than 8,000 kg (18,000 lb) into low earth orbit, antares is currently the largest rocket operated by northrop grumman.antares launches from the mid-atlantic regional spaceport and made its inaugural flight on april 21, 2013.nasa awarded orbital a commercial orbital transportation services (cots) space act agreement (saa) in 2008 to demonstrate delivery of cargo to the international space station.for these cots missions orbital intends to use antares to launch its cygnus spacecraft.in addition, antares will compete for small-to-medium missions.originally designated the taurus ii, orbital sciences renamed the vehicle antares, after the star of the same name, on december 12, 2011.out of 17 total launches, antares has suffered one failure.during the fifth launch on october 28, 2014, the rocket failed catastrophically, and the vehicle and payload were destroyed.the rocket's first-stage engines were identified as the cause for the failure.a different engine was chosen for subsequent launches, and the rocket had a successful return to flight on october 17, 2016.the antares has flown two major design iterations, the 100 series and 200 series.both series have used a castor 30xl as an upper stage but have differed on the first stage.the 100 series used two kerolox powered aj26 engine in the first stage and launched successfully four times.the 100 series was retired following a launch failure in 2014.the 200 series which first flew in 2016 also featured a kerolox first stage but instead used two rd-181 engine along with other minor upgrades.the 200 series future became uncertain following the russian invasion of ukraine.due to the first stage being produced in ukraine and the engines in russia, future production of the rocket was unable to be continued.as a result northrop grumman entered into an agreement with firefly aerospace to build the first stage of the antares 300 series.northrop also contracted with spacex for 3 falcon 9 launches.a commercial resupply service contract of $1.9 billion for eight flights was awarded in 2008.as of april 2012, development costs were estimated at $472 million.in june 2008, it was announced that the mid-atlantic regional spaceport, formerly part of the wallops flight facility, in virginia, would be the primary launch site for the rocket.launch pad 0a (lp-0a), previously used for the failed conestoga rocket, would be modified to handle antares.wallops allows launches which reach the international space station's orbit as effectively as those from cape canaveral, florida, while being less crowded.the first antares flight launched a cygnus mass simulator.on december 10, 2009, alliant techsystems inc. (atk) test-fired their castor 30 motor for use on the second stage of the antares rocket.in march 2010, orbital sciences and aerojet completed test firings of the aj-26 engines.on february 22, 2013, a hot fire test was successfully performed, the entire first stage being erected on the pad and held down while the engines fired for 29 seconds.as orbital had little experience with large liquid stages and lox propellant, the first stage core was designed and is manufactured in ukraine by kb pivdenne and pivdenmash and includes propellant tanks, pressurization tanks, valves, sensors, feed lines, tubing, wiring and other associated hardware.like the zenit—also manufactured by yuzhmash—the antares vehicle has a diameter of 3.9 m (150 in) with a matching 3.9 m payload fairing.
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antares rocket | manufacturer | yuzhnoye design office <tsp> yuzhnoye design office | location | ukraine
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antares (), known during early development as taurus ii, is an expendable launch system developed by orbital sciences corporation (now part of northrop grumman) and the pivdenne design bureau to launch the cygnus spacecraft to the international space station as part of nasa's cots and crs programs.originally designated the taurus ii, orbital sciences renamed the vehicle antares, after the star of the same name, on december 12, 2011.the antares has flown two major design iterations, the 100 series and 200 series.as orbital had little experience with large liquid stages and lox propellant, the first stage core was designed and is manufactured in ukraine by kb pivdenne and pivdenmash and includes propellant tanks, pressurization tanks, valves, sensors, feed lines, tubing, wiring and other associated hardware.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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spinate | snasty | pupahood
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no related information
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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dedicatory | dissect | koruny <tsp> dedicatory | peripherally | oviscapt
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no related information
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antares (), known during early development as taurus ii, is an expendable launch system developed by orbital sciences corporation (now part of northrop grumman) and the pivdenne design bureau to launch the cygnus spacecraft to the international space station as part of nasa's cots and crs programs.able to launch payloads heavier than 8,000 kg (18,000 lb) into low earth orbit, antares is currently the largest rocket operated by northrop grumman.antares launches from the mid-atlantic regional spaceport and made its inaugural flight on april 21, 2013.nasa awarded orbital a commercial orbital transportation services (cots) space act agreement (saa) in 2008 to demonstrate delivery of cargo to the international space station.for these cots missions orbital intends to use antares to launch its cygnus spacecraft.in addition, antares will compete for small-to-medium missions.originally designated the taurus ii, orbital sciences renamed the vehicle antares, after the star of the same name, on december 12, 2011.out of 17 total launches, antares has suffered one failure.during the fifth launch on october 28, 2014, the rocket failed catastrophically, and the vehicle and payload were destroyed.the rocket's first-stage engines were identified as the cause for the failure.a different engine was chosen for subsequent launches, and the rocket had a successful return to flight on october 17, 2016.the antares has flown two major design iterations, the 100 series and 200 series.both series have used a castor 30xl as an upper stage but have differed on the first stage.the 100 series used two kerolox powered aj26 engine in the first stage and launched successfully four times.the 100 series was retired following a launch failure in 2014.the 200 series which first flew in 2016 also featured a kerolox first stage but instead used two rd-181 engine along with other minor upgrades.the 200 series future became uncertain following the russian invasion of ukraine.due to the first stage being produced in ukraine and the engines in russia, future production of the rocket was unable to be continued.as a result northrop grumman entered into an agreement with firefly aerospace to build the first stage of the antares 300 series.northrop also contracted with spacex for 3 falcon 9 launches.a commercial resupply service contract of $1.9 billion for eight flights was awarded in 2008.as of april 2012, development costs were estimated at $472 million.in june 2008, it was announced that the mid-atlantic regional spaceport, formerly part of the wallops flight facility, in virginia, would be the primary launch site for the rocket.launch pad 0a (lp-0a), previously used for the failed conestoga rocket, would be modified to handle antares.wallops allows launches which reach the international space station's orbit as effectively as those from cape canaveral, florida, while being less crowded.the first antares flight launched a cygnus mass simulator.on december 10, 2009, alliant techsystems inc. (atk) test-fired their castor 30 motor for use on the second stage of the antares rocket.in march 2010, orbital sciences and aerojet completed test firings of the aj-26 engines.on february 22, 2013, a hot fire test was successfully performed, the entire first stage being erected on the pad and held down while the engines fired for 29 seconds.as orbital had little experience with large liquid stages and lox propellant, the first stage core was designed and is manufactured in ukraine by kb pivdenne and pivdenmash and includes propellant tanks, pressurization tanks, valves, sensors, feed lines, tubing, wiring and other associated hardware.like the zenit—also manufactured by yuzhmash—the antares vehicle has a diameter of 3.9 m (150 in) with a matching 3.9 m payload fairing.
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antares rocket | manufacturer | yuzhnoye design office <tsp> yuzhnoye design office | location | ukraine
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antares (), known during early development as taurus ii, is an expendable launch system developed by orbital sciences corporation (now part of northrop grumman) and the pivdenne design bureau to launch the cygnus spacecraft to the international space station as part of nasa's cots and crs programs.originally designated the taurus ii, orbital sciences renamed the vehicle antares, after the star of the same name, on december 12, 2011.the antares has flown two major design iterations, the 100 series and 200 series.as orbital had little experience with large liquid stages and lox propellant, the first stage core was designed and is manufactured in ukraine by kb pivdenne and pivdenmash and includes propellant tanks, pressurization tanks, valves, sensors, feed lines, tubing, wiring and other associated hardware.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | adams township madison county indiana <tsp> adams township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | madison county indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | germany national under-21 football team <tsp> aaron hunt | youthclub | goslarer sc 08 <tsp> aaron hunt | club | sv werder bremen
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | adams township madison county indiana <tsp> adams township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | madison county indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | germany national under-21 football team <tsp> aaron hunt | youthclub | goslarer sc 08 <tsp> aaron hunt | club | sv werder bremen
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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34°s 64°w argentina (spanish pronunciation: [aɾxenˈtina] (listen)), officially the argentine republic (spanish: república argentina), is a country in the southern half of south america.argentina covers an area of 2,780,400 km2 (1,073,500 sq mi), making it the second-largest country in south america after brazil, the fourth-largest country in the americas, and the eighth-largest country in the world.it shares the bulk of the southern cone with chile to the west, and is also bordered by bolivia and paraguay to the north, brazil to the northeast, uruguay and the south atlantic ocean to the east, and the drake passage to the south.argentina is a federal state subdivided into twenty-three provinces, and one autonomous city, which is the federal capital and largest city of the nation, buenos aires.the provinces and the capital have their own constitutions, but exist under a federal system.argentina claims sovereignty over the falkland islands, south georgia and the south sandwich islands, and a part of antarctica.the earliest recorded human presence in modern-day argentina dates back to the paleolithic period.the inca empire expanded to the northwest of the country in pre-columbian times.the country has its roots in spanish colonization of the region during the 16th century.argentina rose as the successor state of the viceroyalty of the río de la plata, a spanish overseas viceroyalty founded in 1776.the declaration and fight for independence (1810–1818) was followed by an extended civil war that lasted until 1861, culminating in the country's reorganization as a federation.the country thereafter enjoyed relative peace and stability, with several waves of european immigration, mainly italians and spaniards, influencing its culture and demography.the almost-unparalleled increase in prosperity led to argentina becoming the seventh-wealthiest nation in the world by the early 20th century.in 1896, argentina's gdp per capita surpassed that of the united states and was consistently in the top ten before at least 1920.although it remained among the fifteen richest countries for several decades, following the great depression in the 1930s, argentina descended into political instability and economic decline that pushed it back into underdevelopment, being currently ranked 62nd in the world.following the death of president juan perón in 1974, his widow and vice president, isabel perón, ascended to the presidency, before being overthrown in 1976.the following military junta, which was supported by the united states, persecuted and murdered thousands of political critics, activists, and leftists in the dirty war, a period of state terrorism and civil unrest that lasted until the election of raúl alfonsín as president in 1983.argentina is a regional power, and retains its historic status as a middle power in international affairs.a major non-nato ally of the united states, argentina is a developing country with the second-highest hdi (human development index) in latin america after chile.it maintains the second-largest economy in south america, and is a member of g-15 and g20.argentina is also a founding member of the united nations, world bank, world trade organization, mercosur, community of latin american and caribbean states and the organization of ibero-american states.argentina (masculine argentino) means in italian '(made) of silver, silver coloured', derived from the latin 'argentum' for silver.in italian, the adjective or the proper noun is often used in an autonomous way as a substantive and replaces it and it is said l'argentina.the name argentina was probably first given by the venetian and genoese navigators, such as giovanni caboto.in spanish and portuguese, the words for 'silver' are respectively plata and prata and '(made) of silver' is plateado and prateado.argentina was first associated with the silver mountains legend, widespread among the first european explorers of the la plata basin.the first written use of the name in spanish can be traced to la argentina, a 1602 poem by martín del barco centenera describing the region.
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argentina | capital | buenos aires <tsp> ara veinticinco de mayo v-2 | country | argentina
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argentina is a federal state subdivided into twenty-three provinces, and one autonomous city, which is the federal capital and largest city of the nation, buenos aires.the country thereafter enjoyed relative peace and stability, with several waves of european immigration, mainly italians and spaniards, influencing its culture and demography.the almost-unparalleled increase in prosperity led to argentina becoming the seventh-wealthiest nation in the world by the early 20th century.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | adams township madison county indiana <tsp> indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | germany national youth football team <tsp> aaron hunt | youthclub | sv werder bremen <tsp> aaron hunt | club | hamburger sv
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.
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34°s 64°w argentina (spanish pronunciation: [aɾxenˈtina] (listen)), officially the argentine republic (spanish: república argentina), is a country in the southern half of south america.argentina covers an area of 2,780,400 km2 (1,073,500 sq mi), making it the second-largest country in south america after brazil, the fourth-largest country in the americas, and the eighth-largest country in the world.it shares the bulk of the southern cone with chile to the west, and is also bordered by bolivia and paraguay to the north, brazil to the northeast, uruguay and the south atlantic ocean to the east, and the drake passage to the south.argentina is a federal state subdivided into twenty-three provinces, and one autonomous city, which is the federal capital and largest city of the nation, buenos aires.the provinces and the capital have their own constitutions, but exist under a federal system.argentina claims sovereignty over the falkland islands, south georgia and the south sandwich islands, and a part of antarctica.the earliest recorded human presence in modern-day argentina dates back to the paleolithic period.the inca empire expanded to the northwest of the country in pre-columbian times.the country has its roots in spanish colonization of the region during the 16th century.argentina rose as the successor state of the viceroyalty of the río de la plata, a spanish overseas viceroyalty founded in 1776.the declaration and fight for independence (1810–1818) was followed by an extended civil war that lasted until 1861, culminating in the country's reorganization as a federation.the country thereafter enjoyed relative peace and stability, with several waves of european immigration, mainly italians and spaniards, influencing its culture and demography.the almost-unparalleled increase in prosperity led to argentina becoming the seventh-wealthiest nation in the world by the early 20th century.in 1896, argentina's gdp per capita surpassed that of the united states and was consistently in the top ten before at least 1920.although it remained among the fifteen richest countries for several decades, following the great depression in the 1930s, argentina descended into political instability and economic decline that pushed it back into underdevelopment, being currently ranked 62nd in the world.following the death of president juan perón in 1974, his widow and vice president, isabel perón, ascended to the presidency, before being overthrown in 1976.the following military junta, which was supported by the united states, persecuted and murdered thousands of political critics, activists, and leftists in the dirty war, a period of state terrorism and civil unrest that lasted until the election of raúl alfonsín as president in 1983.argentina is a regional power, and retains its historic status as a middle power in international affairs.a major non-nato ally of the united states, argentina is a developing country with the second-highest hdi (human development index) in latin america after chile.it maintains the second-largest economy in south america, and is a member of g-15 and g20.argentina is also a founding member of the united nations, world bank, world trade organization, mercosur, community of latin american and caribbean states and the organization of ibero-american states.argentina (masculine argentino) means in italian '(made) of silver, silver coloured', derived from the latin 'argentum' for silver.in italian, the adjective or the proper noun is often used in an autonomous way as a substantive and replaces it and it is said l'argentina.the name argentina was probably first given by the venetian and genoese navigators, such as giovanni caboto.in spanish and portuguese, the words for 'silver' are respectively plata and prata and '(made) of silver' is plateado and prateado.argentina was first associated with the silver mountains legend, widespread among the first european explorers of the la plata basin.the first written use of the name in spanish can be traced to la argentina, a 1602 poem by martín del barco centenera describing the region.
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argentina | capital | buenos aires <tsp> ara veinticinco de mayo v-2 | country | argentina
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argentina is a federal state subdivided into twenty-three provinces, and one autonomous city, which is the federal capital and largest city of the nation, buenos aires.the country thereafter enjoyed relative peace and stability, with several waves of european immigration, mainly italians and spaniards, influencing its culture and demography.the almost-unparalleled increase in prosperity led to argentina becoming the seventh-wealthiest nation in the world by the early 20th century.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | adams township madison county indiana <tsp> indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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splenalgia | overcapably | diandrous
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no related information
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34°s 64°w argentina (spanish pronunciation: [aɾxenˈtina] (listen)), officially the argentine republic (spanish: república argentina), is a country in the southern half of south america.argentina covers an area of 2,780,400 km2 (1,073,500 sq mi), making it the second-largest country in south america after brazil, the fourth-largest country in the americas, and the eighth-largest country in the world.it shares the bulk of the southern cone with chile to the west, and is also bordered by bolivia and paraguay to the north, brazil to the northeast, uruguay and the south atlantic ocean to the east, and the drake passage to the south.argentina is a federal state subdivided into twenty-three provinces, and one autonomous city, which is the federal capital and largest city of the nation, buenos aires.the provinces and the capital have their own constitutions, but exist under a federal system.argentina claims sovereignty over the falkland islands, south georgia and the south sandwich islands, and a part of antarctica.the earliest recorded human presence in modern-day argentina dates back to the paleolithic period.the inca empire expanded to the northwest of the country in pre-columbian times.the country has its roots in spanish colonization of the region during the 16th century.argentina rose as the successor state of the viceroyalty of the río de la plata, a spanish overseas viceroyalty founded in 1776.the declaration and fight for independence (1810–1818) was followed by an extended civil war that lasted until 1861, culminating in the country's reorganization as a federation.the country thereafter enjoyed relative peace and stability, with several waves of european immigration, mainly italians and spaniards, influencing its culture and demography.the almost-unparalleled increase in prosperity led to argentina becoming the seventh-wealthiest nation in the world by the early 20th century.in 1896, argentina's gdp per capita surpassed that of the united states and was consistently in the top ten before at least 1920.although it remained among the fifteen richest countries for several decades, following the great depression in the 1930s, argentina descended into political instability and economic decline that pushed it back into underdevelopment, being currently ranked 62nd in the world.following the death of president juan perón in 1974, his widow and vice president, isabel perón, ascended to the presidency, before being overthrown in 1976.the following military junta, which was supported by the united states, persecuted and murdered thousands of political critics, activists, and leftists in the dirty war, a period of state terrorism and civil unrest that lasted until the election of raúl alfonsín as president in 1983.argentina is a regional power, and retains its historic status as a middle power in international affairs.a major non-nato ally of the united states, argentina is a developing country with the second-highest hdi (human development index) in latin america after chile.it maintains the second-largest economy in south america, and is a member of g-15 and g20.argentina is also a founding member of the united nations, world bank, world trade organization, mercosur, community of latin american and caribbean states and the organization of ibero-american states.argentina (masculine argentino) means in italian '(made) of silver, silver coloured', derived from the latin 'argentum' for silver.in italian, the adjective or the proper noun is often used in an autonomous way as a substantive and replaces it and it is said l'argentina.the name argentina was probably first given by the venetian and genoese navigators, such as giovanni caboto.in spanish and portuguese, the words for 'silver' are respectively plata and prata and '(made) of silver' is plateado and prateado.argentina was first associated with the silver mountains legend, widespread among the first european explorers of the la plata basin.the first written use of the name in spanish can be traced to la argentina, a 1602 poem by martín del barco centenera describing the region.
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argentina | capital | buenos aires <tsp> ara veinticinco de mayo v-2 | country | argentina
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argentina is a federal state subdivided into twenty-three provinces, and one autonomous city, which is the federal capital and largest city of the nation, buenos aires.the country thereafter enjoyed relative peace and stability, with several waves of european immigration, mainly italians and spaniards, influencing its culture and demography.the almost-unparalleled increase in prosperity led to argentina becoming the seventh-wealthiest nation in the world by the early 20th century.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | adams township madison county indiana <tsp> indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | germany national youth football team <tsp> aaron hunt | youthclub | sv werder bremen <tsp> aaron hunt | club | hamburger sv
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | anderson township madison county indiana <tsp> anderson township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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blastogranitic | unsaline | feringhee
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no related information
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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conciser | tabs | roundhead <tsp> conciser | printed | lengthsman
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no related information
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | anderson township madison county indiana <tsp> anderson township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.
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34°s 64°w argentina (spanish pronunciation: [aɾxenˈtina] (listen)), officially the argentine republic (spanish: república argentina), is a country in the southern half of south america.argentina covers an area of 2,780,400 km2 (1,073,500 sq mi), making it the second-largest country in south america after brazil, the fourth-largest country in the americas, and the eighth-largest country in the world.it shares the bulk of the southern cone with chile to the west, and is also bordered by bolivia and paraguay to the north, brazil to the northeast, uruguay and the south atlantic ocean to the east, and the drake passage to the south.argentina is a federal state subdivided into twenty-three provinces, and one autonomous city, which is the federal capital and largest city of the nation, buenos aires.the provinces and the capital have their own constitutions, but exist under a federal system.argentina claims sovereignty over the falkland islands, south georgia and the south sandwich islands, and a part of antarctica.the earliest recorded human presence in modern-day argentina dates back to the paleolithic period.the inca empire expanded to the northwest of the country in pre-columbian times.the country has its roots in spanish colonization of the region during the 16th century.argentina rose as the successor state of the viceroyalty of the río de la plata, a spanish overseas viceroyalty founded in 1776.the declaration and fight for independence (1810–1818) was followed by an extended civil war that lasted until 1861, culminating in the country's reorganization as a federation.the country thereafter enjoyed relative peace and stability, with several waves of european immigration, mainly italians and spaniards, influencing its culture and demography.the almost-unparalleled increase in prosperity led to argentina becoming the seventh-wealthiest nation in the world by the early 20th century.in 1896, argentina's gdp per capita surpassed that of the united states and was consistently in the top ten before at least 1920.although it remained among the fifteen richest countries for several decades, following the great depression in the 1930s, argentina descended into political instability and economic decline that pushed it back into underdevelopment, being currently ranked 62nd in the world.following the death of president juan perón in 1974, his widow and vice president, isabel perón, ascended to the presidency, before being overthrown in 1976.the following military junta, which was supported by the united states, persecuted and murdered thousands of political critics, activists, and leftists in the dirty war, a period of state terrorism and civil unrest that lasted until the election of raúl alfonsín as president in 1983.argentina is a regional power, and retains its historic status as a middle power in international affairs.a major non-nato ally of the united states, argentina is a developing country with the second-highest hdi (human development index) in latin america after chile.it maintains the second-largest economy in south america, and is a member of g-15 and g20.argentina is also a founding member of the united nations, world bank, world trade organization, mercosur, community of latin american and caribbean states and the organization of ibero-american states.argentina (masculine argentino) means in italian '(made) of silver, silver coloured', derived from the latin 'argentum' for silver.in italian, the adjective or the proper noun is often used in an autonomous way as a substantive and replaces it and it is said l'argentina.the name argentina was probably first given by the venetian and genoese navigators, such as giovanni caboto.in spanish and portuguese, the words for 'silver' are respectively plata and prata and '(made) of silver' is plateado and prateado.argentina was first associated with the silver mountains legend, widespread among the first european explorers of the la plata basin.the first written use of the name in spanish can be traced to la argentina, a 1602 poem by martín del barco centenera describing the region.
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catcaller | geranial | overqualify
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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muskiest | conferment | allobar
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | anderson township madison county indiana <tsp> indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.
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34°s 64°w argentina (spanish pronunciation: [aɾxenˈtina] (listen)), officially the argentine republic (spanish: república argentina), is a country in the southern half of south america.argentina covers an area of 2,780,400 km2 (1,073,500 sq mi), making it the second-largest country in south america after brazil, the fourth-largest country in the americas, and the eighth-largest country in the world.it shares the bulk of the southern cone with chile to the west, and is also bordered by bolivia and paraguay to the north, brazil to the northeast, uruguay and the south atlantic ocean to the east, and the drake passage to the south.argentina is a federal state subdivided into twenty-three provinces, and one autonomous city, which is the federal capital and largest city of the nation, buenos aires.the provinces and the capital have their own constitutions, but exist under a federal system.argentina claims sovereignty over the falkland islands, south georgia and the south sandwich islands, and a part of antarctica.the earliest recorded human presence in modern-day argentina dates back to the paleolithic period.the inca empire expanded to the northwest of the country in pre-columbian times.the country has its roots in spanish colonization of the region during the 16th century.argentina rose as the successor state of the viceroyalty of the río de la plata, a spanish overseas viceroyalty founded in 1776.the declaration and fight for independence (1810–1818) was followed by an extended civil war that lasted until 1861, culminating in the country's reorganization as a federation.the country thereafter enjoyed relative peace and stability, with several waves of european immigration, mainly italians and spaniards, influencing its culture and demography.the almost-unparalleled increase in prosperity led to argentina becoming the seventh-wealthiest nation in the world by the early 20th century.in 1896, argentina's gdp per capita surpassed that of the united states and was consistently in the top ten before at least 1920.although it remained among the fifteen richest countries for several decades, following the great depression in the 1930s, argentina descended into political instability and economic decline that pushed it back into underdevelopment, being currently ranked 62nd in the world.following the death of president juan perón in 1974, his widow and vice president, isabel perón, ascended to the presidency, before being overthrown in 1976.the following military junta, which was supported by the united states, persecuted and murdered thousands of political critics, activists, and leftists in the dirty war, a period of state terrorism and civil unrest that lasted until the election of raúl alfonsín as president in 1983.argentina is a regional power, and retains its historic status as a middle power in international affairs.a major non-nato ally of the united states, argentina is a developing country with the second-highest hdi (human development index) in latin america after chile.it maintains the second-largest economy in south america, and is a member of g-15 and g20.argentina is also a founding member of the united nations, world bank, world trade organization, mercosur, community of latin american and caribbean states and the organization of ibero-american states.argentina (masculine argentino) means in italian '(made) of silver, silver coloured', derived from the latin 'argentum' for silver.in italian, the adjective or the proper noun is often used in an autonomous way as a substantive and replaces it and it is said l'argentina.the name argentina was probably first given by the venetian and genoese navigators, such as giovanni caboto.in spanish and portuguese, the words for 'silver' are respectively plata and prata and '(made) of silver' is plateado and prateado.argentina was first associated with the silver mountains legend, widespread among the first european explorers of the la plata basin.the first written use of the name in spanish can be traced to la argentina, a 1602 poem by martín del barco centenera describing the region.
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argentina | leadername | mauricio macri <tsp> ara veinticinco de mayo v-2 | country | argentina
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the country thereafter enjoyed relative peace and stability, with several waves of european immigration, mainly italians and spaniards, influencing its culture and demography.the almost-unparalleled increase in prosperity led to argentina becoming the seventh-wealthiest nation in the world by the early 20th century.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | anderson township madison county indiana <tsp> indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | anderson township madison county indiana <tsp> indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.
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34°s 64°w argentina (spanish pronunciation: [aɾxenˈtina] (listen)), officially the argentine republic (spanish: república argentina), is a country in the southern half of south america.argentina covers an area of 2,780,400 km2 (1,073,500 sq mi), making it the second-largest country in south america after brazil, the fourth-largest country in the americas, and the eighth-largest country in the world.it shares the bulk of the southern cone with chile to the west, and is also bordered by bolivia and paraguay to the north, brazil to the northeast, uruguay and the south atlantic ocean to the east, and the drake passage to the south.argentina is a federal state subdivided into twenty-three provinces, and one autonomous city, which is the federal capital and largest city of the nation, buenos aires.the provinces and the capital have their own constitutions, but exist under a federal system.argentina claims sovereignty over the falkland islands, south georgia and the south sandwich islands, and a part of antarctica.the earliest recorded human presence in modern-day argentina dates back to the paleolithic period.the inca empire expanded to the northwest of the country in pre-columbian times.the country has its roots in spanish colonization of the region during the 16th century.argentina rose as the successor state of the viceroyalty of the río de la plata, a spanish overseas viceroyalty founded in 1776.the declaration and fight for independence (1810–1818) was followed by an extended civil war that lasted until 1861, culminating in the country's reorganization as a federation.the country thereafter enjoyed relative peace and stability, with several waves of european immigration, mainly italians and spaniards, influencing its culture and demography.the almost-unparalleled increase in prosperity led to argentina becoming the seventh-wealthiest nation in the world by the early 20th century.in 1896, argentina's gdp per capita surpassed that of the united states and was consistently in the top ten before at least 1920.although it remained among the fifteen richest countries for several decades, following the great depression in the 1930s, argentina descended into political instability and economic decline that pushed it back into underdevelopment, being currently ranked 62nd in the world.following the death of president juan perón in 1974, his widow and vice president, isabel perón, ascended to the presidency, before being overthrown in 1976.the following military junta, which was supported by the united states, persecuted and murdered thousands of political critics, activists, and leftists in the dirty war, a period of state terrorism and civil unrest that lasted until the election of raúl alfonsín as president in 1983.argentina is a regional power, and retains its historic status as a middle power in international affairs.a major non-nato ally of the united states, argentina is a developing country with the second-highest hdi (human development index) in latin america after chile.it maintains the second-largest economy in south america, and is a member of g-15 and g20.argentina is also a founding member of the united nations, world bank, world trade organization, mercosur, community of latin american and caribbean states and the organization of ibero-american states.argentina (masculine argentino) means in italian '(made) of silver, silver coloured', derived from the latin 'argentum' for silver.in italian, the adjective or the proper noun is often used in an autonomous way as a substantive and replaces it and it is said l'argentina.the name argentina was probably first given by the venetian and genoese navigators, such as giovanni caboto.in spanish and portuguese, the words for 'silver' are respectively plata and prata and '(made) of silver' is plateado and prateado.argentina was first associated with the silver mountains legend, widespread among the first european explorers of the la plata basin.the first written use of the name in spanish can be traced to la argentina, a 1602 poem by martín del barco centenera describing the region.
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nonresidency | tintyper | mounds
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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grisbet | proselyted | undulant <tsp> grisbet | bokadam | atmosphereless
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | anderson township madison county indiana <tsp> madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | madison county indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | hamburger sv <tsp> aaron hunt | club | sv werder bremen ii <tsp> aaron hunt | youthclub | goslarer sc 08
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hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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stabilization | codirectional | menispermine
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no related information
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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oophoromania | disestablismentarian | roseoliform
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no related information
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apollo 1, initially designated as-204, was the first crewed mission of the apollo program, the american undertaking to land the first man on the moon.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.the first successful crewed apollo mission was flown by apollo 1's backup crew on apollo 7 in october 1968.as-204 was to test launch operations, ground tracking and control facilities and the performance of the apollo-saturn launch assembly and would have lasted up to two weeks, depending on how the spacecraft performed.the csm for this flight, number 012 built by north american aviation (naa), was a block i version designed before the lunar orbit rendezvous landing strategy was chosen; therefore it lacked the capability of docking with the lunar module.this was incorporated into the block ii csm design, along with lessons learned in block i.block ii would be test-flown with the lm when the latter was ready.director of flight crew operations deke slayton selected the first apollo crew in january 1966, with grissom as command pilot, white as senior pilot, and rookie donn f. eisele as pilot.but eisele dislocated his shoulder twice aboard the kc-135 weightlessness training aircraft, and had to undergo surgery on january 27.slayton replaced him with chaffee, and nasa announced the crew selection on march 21, 1966.james mcdivitt, david scott and russell schweickart were named as the backup crew.on september 29, walter schirra, eisele, and walter cunningham were named as the prime crew for a second block i csm flight, as-205.nasa planned to follow this with an uncrewed test flight of the lm (as-206), then the third crewed mission would be a dual flight designated as-278 (or as-207/208), in which as-207 would launch the first crewed block ii csm, which would then rendezvous and dock with the lm launched uncrewed on as-208.in march, nasa was studying the possibility of flying the first apollo mission as a joint space rendezvous with the final project gemini mission, gemini 12 in november 1966.
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apollo 12 | backup pilot | alfred worden <tsp> alan bean | was a crew member of | apollo 12 <tsp> alan bean | birthplace | wheeler texas
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no related information
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | fall creek township madison county indiana <tsp> fall creek township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | adams fall creek lafayette richland union
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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yob | bivalved | timetable
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no related information
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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disquietudes | enation | impassibleness <tsp> disquietudes | sucklers | cavatina
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no related information
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apollo 1, initially designated as-204, was the first crewed mission of the apollo program, the american undertaking to land the first man on the moon.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.the first successful crewed apollo mission was flown by apollo 1's backup crew on apollo 7 in october 1968.as-204 was to test launch operations, ground tracking and control facilities and the performance of the apollo-saturn launch assembly and would have lasted up to two weeks, depending on how the spacecraft performed.the csm for this flight, number 012 built by north american aviation (naa), was a block i version designed before the lunar orbit rendezvous landing strategy was chosen; therefore it lacked the capability of docking with the lunar module.this was incorporated into the block ii csm design, along with lessons learned in block i.block ii would be test-flown with the lm when the latter was ready.director of flight crew operations deke slayton selected the first apollo crew in january 1966, with grissom as command pilot, white as senior pilot, and rookie donn f. eisele as pilot.but eisele dislocated his shoulder twice aboard the kc-135 weightlessness training aircraft, and had to undergo surgery on january 27.slayton replaced him with chaffee, and nasa announced the crew selection on march 21, 1966.james mcdivitt, david scott and russell schweickart were named as the backup crew.on september 29, walter schirra, eisele, and walter cunningham were named as the prime crew for a second block i csm flight, as-205.nasa planned to follow this with an uncrewed test flight of the lm (as-206), then the third crewed mission would be a dual flight designated as-278 (or as-207/208), in which as-207 would launch the first crewed block ii csm, which would then rendezvous and dock with the lm launched uncrewed on as-208.in march, nasa was studying the possibility of flying the first apollo mission as a joint space rendezvous with the final project gemini mission, gemini 12 in november 1966.
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invernacular | arri | aftereye
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no related information
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | hamburger sv <tsp> sv werder bremen ii | manager | alexander nouri <tsp> aaron hunt | club | sv werder bremen ii
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hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | fall creek township madison county indiana <tsp> fall creek township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | anderson township madison county indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | hamburger sv <tsp> sv werder bremen ii | manager | alexander nouri <tsp> aaron hunt | club | sv werder bremen ii
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hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.
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apollo 1, initially designated as-204, was the first crewed mission of the apollo program, the american undertaking to land the first man on the moon.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.the first successful crewed apollo mission was flown by apollo 1's backup crew on apollo 7 in october 1968.as-204 was to test launch operations, ground tracking and control facilities and the performance of the apollo-saturn launch assembly and would have lasted up to two weeks, depending on how the spacecraft performed.the csm for this flight, number 012 built by north american aviation (naa), was a block i version designed before the lunar orbit rendezvous landing strategy was chosen; therefore it lacked the capability of docking with the lunar module.this was incorporated into the block ii csm design, along with lessons learned in block i.block ii would be test-flown with the lm when the latter was ready.director of flight crew operations deke slayton selected the first apollo crew in january 1966, with grissom as command pilot, white as senior pilot, and rookie donn f. eisele as pilot.but eisele dislocated his shoulder twice aboard the kc-135 weightlessness training aircraft, and had to undergo surgery on january 27.slayton replaced him with chaffee, and nasa announced the crew selection on march 21, 1966.james mcdivitt, david scott and russell schweickart were named as the backup crew.on september 29, walter schirra, eisele, and walter cunningham were named as the prime crew for a second block i csm flight, as-205.nasa planned to follow this with an uncrewed test flight of the lm (as-206), then the third crewed mission would be a dual flight designated as-278 (or as-207/208), in which as-207 would launch the first crewed block ii csm, which would then rendezvous and dock with the lm launched uncrewed on as-208.in march, nasa was studying the possibility of flying the first apollo mission as a joint space rendezvous with the final project gemini mission, gemini 12 in november 1966.
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apollo 12 | backup pilot | alfred worden <tsp> alan bean | was a crew member of | apollo 12 <tsp> apollo 12 | operator | nasa
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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.nasa planned to follow this with an uncrewed test flight of the lm (as-206), then the third crewed mission would be a dual flight designated as-278 (or as-207/208), in which as-207 would launch the first crewed block ii csm, which would then rendezvous and dock with the lm launched uncrewed on as-208.in march, nasa was studying the possibility of flying the first apollo mission as a joint space rendezvous with the final project gemini mission, gemini 12 in november 1966.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | fall creek township madison county indiana <tsp> fall creek township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | anderson township madison county indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | sv werder bremen <tsp> aaron hunt | club | hamburger sv <tsp> sv werder bremen | manager | viktor skrypnyk
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hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | sv werder bremen <tsp> aaron hunt | club | hamburger sv <tsp> sv werder bremen | manager | viktor skrypnyk
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hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.
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apollo 1, initially designated as-204, was the first crewed mission of the apollo program, the american undertaking to land the first man on the moon.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.the first successful crewed apollo mission was flown by apollo 1's backup crew on apollo 7 in october 1968.as-204 was to test launch operations, ground tracking and control facilities and the performance of the apollo-saturn launch assembly and would have lasted up to two weeks, depending on how the spacecraft performed.the csm for this flight, number 012 built by north american aviation (naa), was a block i version designed before the lunar orbit rendezvous landing strategy was chosen; therefore it lacked the capability of docking with the lunar module.this was incorporated into the block ii csm design, along with lessons learned in block i.block ii would be test-flown with the lm when the latter was ready.director of flight crew operations deke slayton selected the first apollo crew in january 1966, with grissom as command pilot, white as senior pilot, and rookie donn f. eisele as pilot.but eisele dislocated his shoulder twice aboard the kc-135 weightlessness training aircraft, and had to undergo surgery on january 27.slayton replaced him with chaffee, and nasa announced the crew selection on march 21, 1966.james mcdivitt, david scott and russell schweickart were named as the backup crew.on september 29, walter schirra, eisele, and walter cunningham were named as the prime crew for a second block i csm flight, as-205.nasa planned to follow this with an uncrewed test flight of the lm (as-206), then the third crewed mission would be a dual flight designated as-278 (or as-207/208), in which as-207 would launch the first crewed block ii csm, which would then rendezvous and dock with the lm launched uncrewed on as-208.in march, nasa was studying the possibility of flying the first apollo mission as a joint space rendezvous with the final project gemini mission, gemini 12 in november 1966.
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apollo 12 | backup pilot | alfred worden <tsp> alan bean | was a crew member of | apollo 12 <tsp> apollo 12 | operator | nasa
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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.nasa planned to follow this with an uncrewed test flight of the lm (as-206), then the third crewed mission would be a dual flight designated as-278 (or as-207/208), in which as-207 would launch the first crewed block ii csm, which would then rendezvous and dock with the lm launched uncrewed on as-208.in march, nasa was studying the possibility of flying the first apollo mission as a joint space rendezvous with the final project gemini mission, gemini 12 in november 1966.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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nonextricable | hydrophthalmos | colonising <tsp> nonextricable | woolmen | inusitate
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no related information
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | sv werder bremen <tsp> aaron hunt | club | hamburger sv <tsp> sv werder bremen | manager | viktor skrypnyk
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hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.
|
anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | fall creek township madison county indiana <tsp> fall creek township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | sv werder bremen ii <tsp> aaron hunt | club | goslarer sc 08 <tsp> aaron hunt | youthclub | sv werder bremen
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hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | fall creek township madison county indiana <tsp> fall creek township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | sv werder bremen ii <tsp> aaron hunt | club | goslarer sc 08 <tsp> aaron hunt | youthclub | sv werder bremen
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hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.
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apollo 1, initially designated as-204, was the first crewed mission of the apollo program, the american undertaking to land the first man on the moon.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.the first successful crewed apollo mission was flown by apollo 1's backup crew on apollo 7 in october 1968.as-204 was to test launch operations, ground tracking and control facilities and the performance of the apollo-saturn launch assembly and would have lasted up to two weeks, depending on how the spacecraft performed.the csm for this flight, number 012 built by north american aviation (naa), was a block i version designed before the lunar orbit rendezvous landing strategy was chosen; therefore it lacked the capability of docking with the lunar module.this was incorporated into the block ii csm design, along with lessons learned in block i.block ii would be test-flown with the lm when the latter was ready.director of flight crew operations deke slayton selected the first apollo crew in january 1966, with grissom as command pilot, white as senior pilot, and rookie donn f. eisele as pilot.but eisele dislocated his shoulder twice aboard the kc-135 weightlessness training aircraft, and had to undergo surgery on january 27.slayton replaced him with chaffee, and nasa announced the crew selection on march 21, 1966.james mcdivitt, david scott and russell schweickart were named as the backup crew.on september 29, walter schirra, eisele, and walter cunningham were named as the prime crew for a second block i csm flight, as-205.nasa planned to follow this with an uncrewed test flight of the lm (as-206), then the third crewed mission would be a dual flight designated as-278 (or as-207/208), in which as-207 would launch the first crewed block ii csm, which would then rendezvous and dock with the lm launched uncrewed on as-208.in march, nasa was studying the possibility of flying the first apollo mission as a joint space rendezvous with the final project gemini mission, gemini 12 in november 1966.
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aurorean | frilliest | inquisitorial <tsp> aurorean | fumify | malanga
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no related information
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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valuationally | mission | vassalship
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no related information
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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misqualifying | governments | immoveable
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no related information
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apollo 1, initially designated as-204, was the first crewed mission of the apollo program, the american undertaking to land the first man on the moon.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.the first successful crewed apollo mission was flown by apollo 1's backup crew on apollo 7 in october 1968.as-204 was to test launch operations, ground tracking and control facilities and the performance of the apollo-saturn launch assembly and would have lasted up to two weeks, depending on how the spacecraft performed.the csm for this flight, number 012 built by north american aviation (naa), was a block i version designed before the lunar orbit rendezvous landing strategy was chosen; therefore it lacked the capability of docking with the lunar module.this was incorporated into the block ii csm design, along with lessons learned in block i.block ii would be test-flown with the lm when the latter was ready.director of flight crew operations deke slayton selected the first apollo crew in january 1966, with grissom as command pilot, white as senior pilot, and rookie donn f. eisele as pilot.but eisele dislocated his shoulder twice aboard the kc-135 weightlessness training aircraft, and had to undergo surgery on january 27.slayton replaced him with chaffee, and nasa announced the crew selection on march 21, 1966.james mcdivitt, david scott and russell schweickart were named as the backup crew.on september 29, walter schirra, eisele, and walter cunningham were named as the prime crew for a second block i csm flight, as-205.nasa planned to follow this with an uncrewed test flight of the lm (as-206), then the third crewed mission would be a dual flight designated as-278 (or as-207/208), in which as-207 would launch the first crewed block ii csm, which would then rendezvous and dock with the lm launched uncrewed on as-208.in march, nasa was studying the possibility of flying the first apollo mission as a joint space rendezvous with the final project gemini mission, gemini 12 in november 1966.
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apollo 8 | commander | frank borman <tsp> william anders | was a crew member of | apollo 8 <tsp> apollo 8 | backup pilot | buzz aldrin
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no related information
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | vfl wolfsburg <tsp> aaron hunt | club | goslarer sc 08 <tsp> aaron hunt | youthclub | sv werder bremen
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hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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pomfret | phytotoma | hardmouthed
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no related information
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apollo 1, initially designated as-204, was the first crewed mission of the apollo program, the american undertaking to land the first man on the moon.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.the first successful crewed apollo mission was flown by apollo 1's backup crew on apollo 7 in october 1968.as-204 was to test launch operations, ground tracking and control facilities and the performance of the apollo-saturn launch assembly and would have lasted up to two weeks, depending on how the spacecraft performed.the csm for this flight, number 012 built by north american aviation (naa), was a block i version designed before the lunar orbit rendezvous landing strategy was chosen; therefore it lacked the capability of docking with the lunar module.this was incorporated into the block ii csm design, along with lessons learned in block i.block ii would be test-flown with the lm when the latter was ready.director of flight crew operations deke slayton selected the first apollo crew in january 1966, with grissom as command pilot, white as senior pilot, and rookie donn f. eisele as pilot.but eisele dislocated his shoulder twice aboard the kc-135 weightlessness training aircraft, and had to undergo surgery on january 27.slayton replaced him with chaffee, and nasa announced the crew selection on march 21, 1966.james mcdivitt, david scott and russell schweickart were named as the backup crew.on september 29, walter schirra, eisele, and walter cunningham were named as the prime crew for a second block i csm flight, as-205.nasa planned to follow this with an uncrewed test flight of the lm (as-206), then the third crewed mission would be a dual flight designated as-278 (or as-207/208), in which as-207 would launch the first crewed block ii csm, which would then rendezvous and dock with the lm launched uncrewed on as-208.in march, nasa was studying the possibility of flying the first apollo mission as a joint space rendezvous with the final project gemini mission, gemini 12 in november 1966.
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apollo 8 | commander | frank borman <tsp> william anders | was a crew member of | apollo 8 <tsp> apollo 8 | backup pilot | buzz aldrin
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no related information
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | fall creek township madison county indiana <tsp> fall creek township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | madison county indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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dephlegmate | recanes | nonmomentariness <tsp> dephlegmate | suspensions | nonfeudal
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no related information
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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allayer | kodakking | kotar
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no related information
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | vfl wolfsburg <tsp> aaron hunt | club | goslarer sc 08 <tsp> aaron hunt | youthclub | sv werder bremen
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hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.
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buzz aldrin (; born edwin eugene aldrin jr.; january 20, 1930) is an american former astronaut, engineer and fighter pilot.he made three spacewalks as pilot of the 1966 gemini 12 mission.he was the lunar module eagle pilot on the 1969 apollo 11 mission and became the second person to walk on the moon after mission commander neil armstrong.born in glen ridge, new jersey, aldrin graduated third in the class of 1951 from the united states military academy at west point with a degree in mechanical engineering.he was commissioned into the united states air force and served as a jet fighter pilot during the korean war.he flew 66 combat missions and shot down two mig-15 aircraft.after earning a doctor of science degree in astronautics from the massachusetts institute of technology (mit), aldrin was selected as a member of nasa's astronaut group 3, making him the first astronaut with a doctoral degree.his doctoral thesis, line-of-sight guidance techniques for manned orbital rendezvous, earned him the nickname 'dr. rendezvous' from fellow astronauts.his first space flight was in 1966 on gemini 12, during which he spent over five hours on extravehicular activity.three years later, aldrin set foot on the moon at 03:15:16 on july 21, 1969 (utc), nineteen minutes after armstrong first touched the surface, while command module pilot michael collins remained in lunar orbit.a presbyterian elder, aldrin became the first person to hold a religious ceremony on the moon when he privately took communion.apollo 11 effectively proved u.s. victory in the space race by fulfilling a national goal proposed in 1961 by president john f. kennedy 'of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth' before the end of the decade.after leaving nasa in 1971, aldrin became commandant of the u.s. air force test pilot school.he retired from the air force in 1972, after 21 years of service.his autobiographies return to earth (1973) and magnificent desolation (2009) recount his struggles with clinical depression and alcoholism in the years after leaving nasa.aldrin continues to advocate for space exploration, particularly a human mission to mars, and developed the aldrin cycler, a special spacecraft trajectory that makes travel to mars more efficient in terms of time and propellant.he has been accorded numerous honors, including the presidential medal of freedom in 1969.his parents, edwin eugene aldrin sr. and marion aldrin (née moon), lived in neighboring montclair.his father was an army aviator during world war i and the assistant commandant of the army's test pilot school at mccook field, ohio, from 1919 to 1922, but left the army in 1928 and became an executive at standard oil.aldrin had two sisters: madeleine, who was four years older, and fay ann, who was a year and a half older.his nickname, which became his legal first name in 1988, arose as a result of fay's mispronouncing 'brother' as 'buzzer', which was then shortened to 'buzz'.he was a boy scout, achieving the rank of tenderfoot scout.aldrin did well in school, maintaining an a average.he played football and was the starting center for montclair high school's undefeated 1946 state champion team.his father wanted him to go to the united states naval academy in annapolis, maryland and enrolled him at nearby severn school, a preparatory school for annapolis and even secured him a naval academy appointment from albert w. hawkes, one of the united states senators from new jersey.aldrin attended severn school in 1946, but had other ideas about his future career.he suffered from seasickness and considered ships a distraction from flying airplanes.
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variers | armoury | unmonarchic
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no related information
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana <tsp> indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | adams fall creek lafayette richland union
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | vfl wolfsburg <tsp> aaron hunt | club | hamburger sv <tsp> aaron hunt | youthclub | sv werder bremen
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hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana <tsp> indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | adams fall creek lafayette richland union
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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buzz aldrin (; born edwin eugene aldrin jr.; january 20, 1930) is an american former astronaut, engineer and fighter pilot.he made three spacewalks as pilot of the 1966 gemini 12 mission.he was the lunar module eagle pilot on the 1969 apollo 11 mission and became the second person to walk on the moon after mission commander neil armstrong.born in glen ridge, new jersey, aldrin graduated third in the class of 1951 from the united states military academy at west point with a degree in mechanical engineering.he was commissioned into the united states air force and served as a jet fighter pilot during the korean war.he flew 66 combat missions and shot down two mig-15 aircraft.after earning a doctor of science degree in astronautics from the massachusetts institute of technology (mit), aldrin was selected as a member of nasa's astronaut group 3, making him the first astronaut with a doctoral degree.his doctoral thesis, line-of-sight guidance techniques for manned orbital rendezvous, earned him the nickname 'dr. rendezvous' from fellow astronauts.his first space flight was in 1966 on gemini 12, during which he spent over five hours on extravehicular activity.three years later, aldrin set foot on the moon at 03:15:16 on july 21, 1969 (utc), nineteen minutes after armstrong first touched the surface, while command module pilot michael collins remained in lunar orbit.a presbyterian elder, aldrin became the first person to hold a religious ceremony on the moon when he privately took communion.apollo 11 effectively proved u.s. victory in the space race by fulfilling a national goal proposed in 1961 by president john f. kennedy 'of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth' before the end of the decade.after leaving nasa in 1971, aldrin became commandant of the u.s. air force test pilot school.he retired from the air force in 1972, after 21 years of service.his autobiographies return to earth (1973) and magnificent desolation (2009) recount his struggles with clinical depression and alcoholism in the years after leaving nasa.aldrin continues to advocate for space exploration, particularly a human mission to mars, and developed the aldrin cycler, a special spacecraft trajectory that makes travel to mars more efficient in terms of time and propellant.he has been accorded numerous honors, including the presidential medal of freedom in 1969.his parents, edwin eugene aldrin sr. and marion aldrin (née moon), lived in neighboring montclair.his father was an army aviator during world war i and the assistant commandant of the army's test pilot school at mccook field, ohio, from 1919 to 1922, but left the army in 1928 and became an executive at standard oil.aldrin had two sisters: madeleine, who was four years older, and fay ann, who was a year and a half older.his nickname, which became his legal first name in 1988, arose as a result of fay's mispronouncing 'brother' as 'buzzer', which was then shortened to 'buzz'.he was a boy scout, achieving the rank of tenderfoot scout.aldrin did well in school, maintaining an a average.he played football and was the starting center for montclair high school's undefeated 1946 state champion team.his father wanted him to go to the united states naval academy in annapolis, maryland and enrolled him at nearby severn school, a preparatory school for annapolis and even secured him a naval academy appointment from albert w. hawkes, one of the united states senators from new jersey.aldrin attended severn school in 1946, but had other ideas about his future career.he suffered from seasickness and considered ships a distraction from flying airplanes.
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heaths | hypnesthesis | nattier
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no related information
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | vfl wolfsburg <tsp> aaron hunt | club | hamburger sv <tsp> aaron hunt | youthclub | sv werder bremen
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hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana <tsp> indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | adams fall creek lafayette richland union
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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buzz aldrin (; born edwin eugene aldrin jr.; january 20, 1930) is an american former astronaut, engineer and fighter pilot.he made three spacewalks as pilot of the 1966 gemini 12 mission.he was the lunar module eagle pilot on the 1969 apollo 11 mission and became the second person to walk on the moon after mission commander neil armstrong.born in glen ridge, new jersey, aldrin graduated third in the class of 1951 from the united states military academy at west point with a degree in mechanical engineering.he was commissioned into the united states air force and served as a jet fighter pilot during the korean war.he flew 66 combat missions and shot down two mig-15 aircraft.after earning a doctor of science degree in astronautics from the massachusetts institute of technology (mit), aldrin was selected as a member of nasa's astronaut group 3, making him the first astronaut with a doctoral degree.his doctoral thesis, line-of-sight guidance techniques for manned orbital rendezvous, earned him the nickname 'dr. rendezvous' from fellow astronauts.his first space flight was in 1966 on gemini 12, during which he spent over five hours on extravehicular activity.three years later, aldrin set foot on the moon at 03:15:16 on july 21, 1969 (utc), nineteen minutes after armstrong first touched the surface, while command module pilot michael collins remained in lunar orbit.a presbyterian elder, aldrin became the first person to hold a religious ceremony on the moon when he privately took communion.apollo 11 effectively proved u.s. victory in the space race by fulfilling a national goal proposed in 1961 by president john f. kennedy 'of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth' before the end of the decade.after leaving nasa in 1971, aldrin became commandant of the u.s. air force test pilot school.he retired from the air force in 1972, after 21 years of service.his autobiographies return to earth (1973) and magnificent desolation (2009) recount his struggles with clinical depression and alcoholism in the years after leaving nasa.aldrin continues to advocate for space exploration, particularly a human mission to mars, and developed the aldrin cycler, a special spacecraft trajectory that makes travel to mars more efficient in terms of time and propellant.he has been accorded numerous honors, including the presidential medal of freedom in 1969.his parents, edwin eugene aldrin sr. and marion aldrin (née moon), lived in neighboring montclair.his father was an army aviator during world war i and the assistant commandant of the army's test pilot school at mccook field, ohio, from 1919 to 1922, but left the army in 1928 and became an executive at standard oil.aldrin had two sisters: madeleine, who was four years older, and fay ann, who was a year and a half older.his nickname, which became his legal first name in 1988, arose as a result of fay's mispronouncing 'brother' as 'buzzer', which was then shortened to 'buzz'.he was a boy scout, achieving the rank of tenderfoot scout.aldrin did well in school, maintaining an a average.he played football and was the starting center for montclair high school's undefeated 1946 state champion team.his father wanted him to go to the united states naval academy in annapolis, maryland and enrolled him at nearby severn school, a preparatory school for annapolis and even secured him a naval academy appointment from albert w. hawkes, one of the united states senators from new jersey.aldrin attended severn school in 1946, but had other ideas about his future career.he suffered from seasickness and considered ships a distraction from flying airplanes.
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buzz aldrin | awards | 20 <tsp> buzz aldrin | almamater | massachusetts institute of technology scd 1963 <tsp> buzz aldrin | birthdate | 1930-01-20
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after earning a doctor of science degree in astronautics from the massachusetts institute of technology (mit), aldrin was selected as a member of nasa's astronaut group 3, making him the first astronaut with a doctoral degree.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | vfl wolfsburg <tsp> aaron hunt | club | hamburger sv <tsp> aaron hunt | youthclub | sv werder bremen
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hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.
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the aston martin v8 is a grand tourer manufactured by aston martin in the united kingdom from 1969 to 1989.as with all traditional aston martins, it was entirely handbuilt – with each car requiring 1,200 man-hours to finish.aston martin were looking to replace the db6 model and had designed a larger, more modern looking car.the engine was not ready, however, so in 1967 the company released the dbs with the straight-six vantage engine from the db6.two years later, tadek marek's v8 was ready, and aston released the dbs v8.with the demise of the straight-six vantage in 1973, the dbs v8, now restyled and called simply the aston martin v8, became the company's mainstream car for nearly two decades.it was eventually retired in favour of the virage in 1989.though the body and name was shared with the six-cylinder dbs, the v8 sold for much more.the body was a modern reinterpretation of the traditional aston martin look, with a squared-off grille and four headlights (william towns admitted that the rear quarters were 'borrowed' from the early ford mustang).distinguishing features of the v8 model are the larger front air dam, 225/70vr15 tyres and lack of wire wheels, though some six-cylinder dbs cars also used the v8's alloy wheels.the tail lights were taken from the hillman hunter.a road test report of the time noted that the car had gained 250 lb (113 kg) in weight with the fitting of the v8 in place of the previously used six-cylinder unit, despite the manufacturer's assurance that the engine weighed only 30 lb (14 kg) more than the older straight-six.other contributions to the weight gain included heavier ventilated brake discs, air conditioning, fatter tyres, a new and stronger zf gearbox as well as some extra bodywork beneath the front bumper.marek's v8 engine displaced 5,340 cc (5.3 l; 325.9 cu in) and used bosch fuel injection.output was not officially released, but estimates center around 315 hp (235 kw).the dbs v8 could reach 100 km/h (62 mph) in 7.1 seconds and had a top speed of 242 km/h (150 mph).402 dbs v8s were built.a dbs v8 was planned to be used by roger moore's character brett sinclair in the television show, the persuaders!but no v8 car was available at that time so a six-cylinder dbs was modified to look like a v8 model for use in the show.it is based on a dbs v8 and two cars were commissioned by the tobacco company w.o.wills to promote their new premium brand of cigarettes: one show car with chassis number dbsv8/10380/r and one road going car with chassis number dbsv8/10381/rc.a third 'replica' car was commissioned by a private party.visual differences included twin quartz-halogen headlights and a mesh grille, a front design which was to last until the end of production in 1989.am v8 cars, produced from may 1972 through july 1973, used a similar engine to the dbs v8, albeit with bosch fuel injection rather than the earlier carburetors.just 288 series 2 cars were built.although david brown had left the company, he had overseen development of this model.the first 34 cars still carried leftover 'dbs v8' badging.these cars are distinguished by a taller hood scoop to accommodate four twin-choke (two-barrel) weber carbs.the car produced 310 hp (231 kw; 314 ps) and could reach 60 mph (97 km/h) in 6.1 seconds with an automatic transmission or 5.7 with a manual.performance suffered with emissions regulations, falling to 288 hp (215 kw; 292 ps) in 1976.the next year, a more powerful 'stage 1' engine with new camshafts and exhaust brought it up to 305 hp (227 kw; 309 ps).these cars either fitted 225/70vr15 avon turbospeed or 235/70vr15 turbospeed rolls-royce tyre on the auto models or the 255/60r15 pirelli cinturato cn12 off the vantage.
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aston martin v8 | assembly | newport pagnell buckinghamshire england united kingdom <tsp> aston martin v8 | relatedmeanoftransportation | aston martin rham/1
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the aston martin v8 is a grand tourer manufactured by aston martin in the united kingdom from 1969 to 1989.as with all traditional aston martins, it was entirely handbuilt – with each car requiring 1,200 man-hours to finish.aston martin were looking to replace the db6 model and had designed a larger, more modern looking car.two years later, tadek marek's v8 was ready, and aston released the dbs v8.with the demise of the straight-six vantage in 1973, the dbs v8, now restyled and called simply the aston martin v8, became the company's mainstream car for nearly two decades.the body was a modern reinterpretation of the traditional aston martin look, with a squared-off grille and four headlights (william towns admitted that the rear quarters were 'borrowed' from the early ford mustang).
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | lafayette township madison county indiana <tsp> lafayette township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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aaron hunt | club | vfl wolfsburg <tsp> aaron hunt | club | sv werder bremen ii <tsp> aaron hunt | youthclub | sv werder bremen
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hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.
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buzz aldrin (; born edwin eugene aldrin jr.; january 20, 1930) is an american former astronaut, engineer and fighter pilot.he made three spacewalks as pilot of the 1966 gemini 12 mission.he was the lunar module eagle pilot on the 1969 apollo 11 mission and became the second person to walk on the moon after mission commander neil armstrong.born in glen ridge, new jersey, aldrin graduated third in the class of 1951 from the united states military academy at west point with a degree in mechanical engineering.he was commissioned into the united states air force and served as a jet fighter pilot during the korean war.he flew 66 combat missions and shot down two mig-15 aircraft.after earning a doctor of science degree in astronautics from the massachusetts institute of technology (mit), aldrin was selected as a member of nasa's astronaut group 3, making him the first astronaut with a doctoral degree.his doctoral thesis, line-of-sight guidance techniques for manned orbital rendezvous, earned him the nickname 'dr. rendezvous' from fellow astronauts.his first space flight was in 1966 on gemini 12, during which he spent over five hours on extravehicular activity.three years later, aldrin set foot on the moon at 03:15:16 on july 21, 1969 (utc), nineteen minutes after armstrong first touched the surface, while command module pilot michael collins remained in lunar orbit.a presbyterian elder, aldrin became the first person to hold a religious ceremony on the moon when he privately took communion.apollo 11 effectively proved u.s. victory in the space race by fulfilling a national goal proposed in 1961 by president john f. kennedy 'of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth' before the end of the decade.after leaving nasa in 1971, aldrin became commandant of the u.s. air force test pilot school.he retired from the air force in 1972, after 21 years of service.his autobiographies return to earth (1973) and magnificent desolation (2009) recount his struggles with clinical depression and alcoholism in the years after leaving nasa.aldrin continues to advocate for space exploration, particularly a human mission to mars, and developed the aldrin cycler, a special spacecraft trajectory that makes travel to mars more efficient in terms of time and propellant.he has been accorded numerous honors, including the presidential medal of freedom in 1969.his parents, edwin eugene aldrin sr. and marion aldrin (née moon), lived in neighboring montclair.his father was an army aviator during world war i and the assistant commandant of the army's test pilot school at mccook field, ohio, from 1919 to 1922, but left the army in 1928 and became an executive at standard oil.aldrin had two sisters: madeleine, who was four years older, and fay ann, who was a year and a half older.his nickname, which became his legal first name in 1988, arose as a result of fay's mispronouncing 'brother' as 'buzzer', which was then shortened to 'buzz'.he was a boy scout, achieving the rank of tenderfoot scout.aldrin did well in school, maintaining an a average.he played football and was the starting center for montclair high school's undefeated 1946 state champion team.his father wanted him to go to the united states naval academy in annapolis, maryland and enrolled him at nearby severn school, a preparatory school for annapolis and even secured him a naval academy appointment from albert w. hawkes, one of the united states senators from new jersey.aldrin attended severn school in 1946, but had other ideas about his future career.he suffered from seasickness and considered ships a distraction from flying airplanes.
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buzz aldrin | awards | 20 <tsp> buzz aldrin | almamater | massachusetts institute of technology scd 1963 <tsp> buzz aldrin | birthdate | 1930-01-20
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after earning a doctor of science degree in astronautics from the massachusetts institute of technology (mit), aldrin was selected as a member of nasa's astronaut group 3, making him the first astronaut with a doctoral degree.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | lafayette township madison county indiana <tsp> lafayette township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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the amc matador is a series of american automobiles that were manufactured and marketed by american motors corporation (amc) across two generations, 1971–1973 (mid-size) and 1974–1978 (full-size), in two-door hardtop (first generation) and coupe (second generation) versions, as well as in four-door sedan and station wagon body styles.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.matadors with heavy-duty police equipment were produced from 1971 through 1975.they continued to be in service longer than normal because of favorable field reports.the matador received a redesign in 1974, in part to meet new safety and crash requirements.the most significant change was to the two-door version.the hardtop was the slowest-selling body style in the matador line although it was in a market segment where two-door models were typically the most popular - and also most profitable.as a result, the boxy two-door hardtop body design was replaced with a completely different and sleeker coupe model 'to contend with the bull market for plush mid-size coupes that sprang up after the end of the muscle car era'.it also featured a design that was praised by owners along with their complaints about its low roofline.the design of the matador coupe has been described as 'polarizing' as well as being 'an evocative, swoopy coupe that perfectly captured the design ethos of the era.'factory-backed first-generation hardtops and second-generation coupes competed in nascar stock car racing from 1972 through 1975.drivers included mark donohue and bobby allison winning several races including the 1975 southern 500 at darlington.the amc matador captured five first-place wins.matadors in police livery were featured in television shows and movies during the 1970s.the matador coupe was a featured car and also a scale model of it was used as a flying car in the man with the golden gun, a james bond film released in 1974.
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amc matador | alternativename | american motors matador <tsp> amc matador | assembly | australia <tsp> amc matador | engine | amc v8 engine
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the amc matador is a series of american automobiles that were manufactured and marketed by american motors corporation (amc) across two generations, 1971–1973 (mid-size) and 1974–1978 (full-size), in two-door hardtop (first generation) and coupe (second generation) versions, as well as in four-door sedan and station wagon body styles.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.matadors with heavy-duty police equipment were produced from 1971 through 1975.they continued to be in service longer than normal because of favorable field reports.the matador received a redesign in 1974, in part to meet new safety and crash requirements.the hardtop was the slowest-selling body style in the matador line although it was in a market segment where two-door models were typically the most popular - and also most profitable.the design of the matador coupe has been described as 'polarizing' as well as being 'an evocative, swoopy coupe that perfectly captured the design ethos of the era.the amc matador captured five first-place wins.matadors in police livery were featured in television shows and movies during the 1970s.the matador coupe was a featured car and also a scale model of it was used as a flying car in the man with the golden gun, a james bond film released in 1974.
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buzz aldrin (; born edwin eugene aldrin jr.; january 20, 1930) is an american former astronaut, engineer and fighter pilot.he made three spacewalks as pilot of the 1966 gemini 12 mission.he was the lunar module eagle pilot on the 1969 apollo 11 mission and became the second person to walk on the moon after mission commander neil armstrong.born in glen ridge, new jersey, aldrin graduated third in the class of 1951 from the united states military academy at west point with a degree in mechanical engineering.he was commissioned into the united states air force and served as a jet fighter pilot during the korean war.he flew 66 combat missions and shot down two mig-15 aircraft.after earning a doctor of science degree in astronautics from the massachusetts institute of technology (mit), aldrin was selected as a member of nasa's astronaut group 3, making him the first astronaut with a doctoral degree.his doctoral thesis, line-of-sight guidance techniques for manned orbital rendezvous, earned him the nickname 'dr. rendezvous' from fellow astronauts.his first space flight was in 1966 on gemini 12, during which he spent over five hours on extravehicular activity.three years later, aldrin set foot on the moon at 03:15:16 on july 21, 1969 (utc), nineteen minutes after armstrong first touched the surface, while command module pilot michael collins remained in lunar orbit.a presbyterian elder, aldrin became the first person to hold a religious ceremony on the moon when he privately took communion.apollo 11 effectively proved u.s. victory in the space race by fulfilling a national goal proposed in 1961 by president john f. kennedy 'of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth' before the end of the decade.after leaving nasa in 1971, aldrin became commandant of the u.s. air force test pilot school.he retired from the air force in 1972, after 21 years of service.his autobiographies return to earth (1973) and magnificent desolation (2009) recount his struggles with clinical depression and alcoholism in the years after leaving nasa.aldrin continues to advocate for space exploration, particularly a human mission to mars, and developed the aldrin cycler, a special spacecraft trajectory that makes travel to mars more efficient in terms of time and propellant.he has been accorded numerous honors, including the presidential medal of freedom in 1969.his parents, edwin eugene aldrin sr. and marion aldrin (née moon), lived in neighboring montclair.his father was an army aviator during world war i and the assistant commandant of the army's test pilot school at mccook field, ohio, from 1919 to 1922, but left the army in 1928 and became an executive at standard oil.aldrin had two sisters: madeleine, who was four years older, and fay ann, who was a year and a half older.his nickname, which became his legal first name in 1988, arose as a result of fay's mispronouncing 'brother' as 'buzzer', which was then shortened to 'buzz'.he was a boy scout, achieving the rank of tenderfoot scout.aldrin did well in school, maintaining an a average.he played football and was the starting center for montclair high school's undefeated 1946 state champion team.his father wanted him to go to the united states naval academy in annapolis, maryland and enrolled him at nearby severn school, a preparatory school for annapolis and even secured him a naval academy appointment from albert w. hawkes, one of the united states senators from new jersey.aldrin attended severn school in 1946, but had other ideas about his future career.he suffered from seasickness and considered ships a distraction from flying airplanes.
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harked | squarishness | wyethia
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no related information
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the amc matador is a series of american automobiles that were manufactured and marketed by american motors corporation (amc) across two generations, 1971–1973 (mid-size) and 1974–1978 (full-size), in two-door hardtop (first generation) and coupe (second generation) versions, as well as in four-door sedan and station wagon body styles.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.matadors with heavy-duty police equipment were produced from 1971 through 1975.they continued to be in service longer than normal because of favorable field reports.the matador received a redesign in 1974, in part to meet new safety and crash requirements.the most significant change was to the two-door version.the hardtop was the slowest-selling body style in the matador line although it was in a market segment where two-door models were typically the most popular - and also most profitable.as a result, the boxy two-door hardtop body design was replaced with a completely different and sleeker coupe model 'to contend with the bull market for plush mid-size coupes that sprang up after the end of the muscle car era'.it also featured a design that was praised by owners along with their complaints about its low roofline.the design of the matador coupe has been described as 'polarizing' as well as being 'an evocative, swoopy coupe that perfectly captured the design ethos of the era.'factory-backed first-generation hardtops and second-generation coupes competed in nascar stock car racing from 1972 through 1975.drivers included mark donohue and bobby allison winning several races including the 1975 southern 500 at darlington.the amc matador captured five first-place wins.matadors in police livery were featured in television shows and movies during the 1970s.the matador coupe was a featured car and also a scale model of it was used as a flying car in the man with the golden gun, a james bond film released in 1974.
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amc matador | alternativename | american motors matador <tsp> amc matador | assembly | australia <tsp> amc matador | engine | amc v8 engine
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the amc matador is a series of american automobiles that were manufactured and marketed by american motors corporation (amc) across two generations, 1971–1973 (mid-size) and 1974–1978 (full-size), in two-door hardtop (first generation) and coupe (second generation) versions, as well as in four-door sedan and station wagon body styles.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.matadors with heavy-duty police equipment were produced from 1971 through 1975.they continued to be in service longer than normal because of favorable field reports.the matador received a redesign in 1974, in part to meet new safety and crash requirements.the hardtop was the slowest-selling body style in the matador line although it was in a market segment where two-door models were typically the most popular - and also most profitable.the design of the matador coupe has been described as 'polarizing' as well as being 'an evocative, swoopy coupe that perfectly captured the design ethos of the era.the amc matador captured five first-place wins.matadors in police livery were featured in television shows and movies during the 1970s.the matador coupe was a featured car and also a scale model of it was used as a flying car in the man with the golden gun, a james bond film released in 1974.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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exploitive | zoologize | scags <tsp> exploitive | frisky | hdqrs
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no related information
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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lissoflagellate | unsharped | hydrovane <tsp> lissoflagellate | celestiality | haute
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no related information
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the amc matador is a series of american automobiles that were manufactured and marketed by american motors corporation (amc) across two generations, 1971–1973 (mid-size) and 1974–1978 (full-size), in two-door hardtop (first generation) and coupe (second generation) versions, as well as in four-door sedan and station wagon body styles.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.matadors with heavy-duty police equipment were produced from 1971 through 1975.they continued to be in service longer than normal because of favorable field reports.the matador received a redesign in 1974, in part to meet new safety and crash requirements.the most significant change was to the two-door version.the hardtop was the slowest-selling body style in the matador line although it was in a market segment where two-door models were typically the most popular - and also most profitable.as a result, the boxy two-door hardtop body design was replaced with a completely different and sleeker coupe model 'to contend with the bull market for plush mid-size coupes that sprang up after the end of the muscle car era'.it also featured a design that was praised by owners along with their complaints about its low roofline.the design of the matador coupe has been described as 'polarizing' as well as being 'an evocative, swoopy coupe that perfectly captured the design ethos of the era.'factory-backed first-generation hardtops and second-generation coupes competed in nascar stock car racing from 1972 through 1975.drivers included mark donohue and bobby allison winning several races including the 1975 southern 500 at darlington.the amc matador captured five first-place wins.matadors in police livery were featured in television shows and movies during the 1970s.the matador coupe was a featured car and also a scale model of it was used as a flying car in the man with the golden gun, a james bond film released in 1974.
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amc matador | alternativename | vam classic <tsp> amc matador | assembly | mexico city <tsp> amc matador | engine | amc v8 engine
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the amc matador is a series of american automobiles that were manufactured and marketed by american motors corporation (amc) across two generations, 1971–1973 (mid-size) and 1974–1978 (full-size), in two-door hardtop (first generation) and coupe (second generation) versions, as well as in four-door sedan and station wagon body styles.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.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).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.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.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.the amc matador captured five first-place wins.matadors in police livery were featured in television shows and movies during the 1970s.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | union township madison county indiana <tsp> union township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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buzz aldrin (; born edwin eugene aldrin jr.; january 20, 1930) is an american former astronaut, engineer and fighter pilot.he made three spacewalks as pilot of the 1966 gemini 12 mission.he was the lunar module eagle pilot on the 1969 apollo 11 mission and became the second person to walk on the moon after mission commander neil armstrong.born in glen ridge, new jersey, aldrin graduated third in the class of 1951 from the united states military academy at west point with a degree in mechanical engineering.he was commissioned into the united states air force and served as a jet fighter pilot during the korean war.he flew 66 combat missions and shot down two mig-15 aircraft.after earning a doctor of science degree in astronautics from the massachusetts institute of technology (mit), aldrin was selected as a member of nasa's astronaut group 3, making him the first astronaut with a doctoral degree.his doctoral thesis, line-of-sight guidance techniques for manned orbital rendezvous, earned him the nickname 'dr. rendezvous' from fellow astronauts.his first space flight was in 1966 on gemini 12, during which he spent over five hours on extravehicular activity.three years later, aldrin set foot on the moon at 03:15:16 on july 21, 1969 (utc), nineteen minutes after armstrong first touched the surface, while command module pilot michael collins remained in lunar orbit.a presbyterian elder, aldrin became the first person to hold a religious ceremony on the moon when he privately took communion.apollo 11 effectively proved u.s. victory in the space race by fulfilling a national goal proposed in 1961 by president john f. kennedy 'of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth' before the end of the decade.after leaving nasa in 1971, aldrin became commandant of the u.s. air force test pilot school.he retired from the air force in 1972, after 21 years of service.his autobiographies return to earth (1973) and magnificent desolation (2009) recount his struggles with clinical depression and alcoholism in the years after leaving nasa.aldrin continues to advocate for space exploration, particularly a human mission to mars, and developed the aldrin cycler, a special spacecraft trajectory that makes travel to mars more efficient in terms of time and propellant.he has been accorded numerous honors, including the presidential medal of freedom in 1969.his parents, edwin eugene aldrin sr. and marion aldrin (née moon), lived in neighboring montclair.his father was an army aviator during world war i and the assistant commandant of the army's test pilot school at mccook field, ohio, from 1919 to 1922, but left the army in 1928 and became an executive at standard oil.aldrin had two sisters: madeleine, who was four years older, and fay ann, who was a year and a half older.his nickname, which became his legal first name in 1988, arose as a result of fay's mispronouncing 'brother' as 'buzzer', which was then shortened to 'buzz'.he was a boy scout, achieving the rank of tenderfoot scout.aldrin did well in school, maintaining an a average.he played football and was the starting center for montclair high school's undefeated 1946 state champion team.his father wanted him to go to the united states naval academy in annapolis, maryland and enrolled him at nearby severn school, a preparatory school for annapolis and even secured him a naval academy appointment from albert w. hawkes, one of the united states senators from new jersey.aldrin attended severn school in 1946, but had other ideas about his future career.he suffered from seasickness and considered ships a distraction from flying airplanes.
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peptidolytic | untouching | handarm
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no related information
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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anderson indiana | ispartof | union township madison county indiana <tsp> union township madison county indiana | country | united states <tsp> anderson indiana | ispartof | indiana
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.
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the amc matador is a series of american automobiles that were manufactured and marketed by american motors corporation (amc) across two generations, 1971–1973 (mid-size) and 1974–1978 (full-size), in two-door hardtop (first generation) and coupe (second generation) versions, as well as in four-door sedan and station wagon body styles.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.matadors with heavy-duty police equipment were produced from 1971 through 1975.they continued to be in service longer than normal because of favorable field reports.the matador received a redesign in 1974, in part to meet new safety and crash requirements.the most significant change was to the two-door version.the hardtop was the slowest-selling body style in the matador line although it was in a market segment where two-door models were typically the most popular - and also most profitable.as a result, the boxy two-door hardtop body design was replaced with a completely different and sleeker coupe model 'to contend with the bull market for plush mid-size coupes that sprang up after the end of the muscle car era'.it also featured a design that was praised by owners along with their complaints about its low roofline.the design of the matador coupe has been described as 'polarizing' as well as being 'an evocative, swoopy coupe that perfectly captured the design ethos of the era.'factory-backed first-generation hardtops and second-generation coupes competed in nascar stock car racing from 1972 through 1975.drivers included mark donohue and bobby allison winning several races including the 1975 southern 500 at darlington.the amc matador captured five first-place wins.matadors in police livery were featured in television shows and movies during the 1970s.the matador coupe was a featured car and also a scale model of it was used as a flying car in the man with the golden gun, a james bond film released in 1974.
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amc matador | alternativename | vam classic <tsp> amc matador | assembly | mexico city <tsp> amc matador | engine | amc v8 engine
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the amc matador is a series of american automobiles that were manufactured and marketed by american motors corporation (amc) across two generations, 1971–1973 (mid-size) and 1974–1978 (full-size), in two-door hardtop (first generation) and coupe (second generation) versions, as well as in four-door sedan and station wagon body styles.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.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).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.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.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.the amc matador captured five first-place wins.matadors in police livery were featured in television shows and movies during the 1970s.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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insatiated | echeneididae | unpitiedness <tsp> insatiated | atelier | nonrepetitive
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no related information
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buzz aldrin (; born edwin eugene aldrin jr.; january 20, 1930) is an american former astronaut, engineer and fighter pilot.he made three spacewalks as pilot of the 1966 gemini 12 mission.he was the lunar module eagle pilot on the 1969 apollo 11 mission and became the second person to walk on the moon after mission commander neil armstrong.born in glen ridge, new jersey, aldrin graduated third in the class of 1951 from the united states military academy at west point with a degree in mechanical engineering.he was commissioned into the united states air force and served as a jet fighter pilot during the korean war.he flew 66 combat missions and shot down two mig-15 aircraft.after earning a doctor of science degree in astronautics from the massachusetts institute of technology (mit), aldrin was selected as a member of nasa's astronaut group 3, making him the first astronaut with a doctoral degree.his doctoral thesis, line-of-sight guidance techniques for manned orbital rendezvous, earned him the nickname 'dr. rendezvous' from fellow astronauts.his first space flight was in 1966 on gemini 12, during which he spent over five hours on extravehicular activity.three years later, aldrin set foot on the moon at 03:15:16 on july 21, 1969 (utc), nineteen minutes after armstrong first touched the surface, while command module pilot michael collins remained in lunar orbit.a presbyterian elder, aldrin became the first person to hold a religious ceremony on the moon when he privately took communion.apollo 11 effectively proved u.s. victory in the space race by fulfilling a national goal proposed in 1961 by president john f. kennedy 'of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth' before the end of the decade.after leaving nasa in 1971, aldrin became commandant of the u.s. air force test pilot school.he retired from the air force in 1972, after 21 years of service.his autobiographies return to earth (1973) and magnificent desolation (2009) recount his struggles with clinical depression and alcoholism in the years after leaving nasa.aldrin continues to advocate for space exploration, particularly a human mission to mars, and developed the aldrin cycler, a special spacecraft trajectory that makes travel to mars more efficient in terms of time and propellant.he has been accorded numerous honors, including the presidential medal of freedom in 1969.his parents, edwin eugene aldrin sr. and marion aldrin (née moon), lived in neighboring montclair.his father was an army aviator during world war i and the assistant commandant of the army's test pilot school at mccook field, ohio, from 1919 to 1922, but left the army in 1928 and became an executive at standard oil.aldrin had two sisters: madeleine, who was four years older, and fay ann, who was a year and a half older.his nickname, which became his legal first name in 1988, arose as a result of fay's mispronouncing 'brother' as 'buzzer', which was then shortened to 'buzz'.he was a boy scout, achieving the rank of tenderfoot scout.aldrin did well in school, maintaining an a average.he played football and was the starting center for montclair high school's undefeated 1946 state champion team.his father wanted him to go to the united states naval academy in annapolis, maryland and enrolled him at nearby severn school, a preparatory school for annapolis and even secured him a naval academy appointment from albert w. hawkes, one of the united states senators from new jersey.aldrin attended severn school in 1946, but had other ideas about his future career.he suffered from seasickness and considered ships a distraction from flying airplanes.
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buzz aldrin | birthplace | glen ridge new jersey <tsp> buzz aldrin | nationality | united states <tsp> buzz aldrin | status | retired
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born in glen ridge, new jersey, aldrin graduated third in the class of 1951 from the united states military academy at west point with a degree in mechanical engineering.
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anderson is a city in madison county, indiana, united states.named after chief william anderson, it is the county seat of madison county.the city is the headquarters of the church of god (anderson) and home of anderson university, which is affiliated with the church of god.highlights of the city include the historic paramount theatre and the gruenewald house.the population was 54,788 at the 2020 census.conner later sold the ground to john and sarah berry, who donated 32 acres (13 ha) of their land to madison county on the condition that the county seat be moved from pendleton to anderson.john berry laid out the first plat of anderson on november 7, 1827.in 1828 the seat of justice was moved from pendleton to anderson.the city is named for chief william 'adam' anderson, whose mother was lenape and whose father was of swedish descent.chief anderson's name in lenape was kikthawenund, meaning 'creaking boughs'.the lenape village was known as 'anderson's town', though the moravian missionaries called it 'the heathen town four miles away'.anderson was also known as 'andersonton' before being formally organized as anderson.introduction of internal improvements by the mammoth internal improvement act caused a growth in the population in 1837.in december 1838, anderson was incorporated as a town with 350 inhabitants.the central canal, a branch of the wabash and erie canal, was planned to come through anderson.work continued on the canal during 1838 and the beginning of 1839, but the work was soon suspended by the state following effects of the panic of 1837.the town again became a sleepy village until 1849, when it was incorporated a second time as a town.many new commercial ventures located around the courthouse square.this incorporation was short-lived, and anderson once again went back to village status in 1852.however, with the completion of the indianapolis bellefontaine railroad, as well as their station in 1852, anderson burst to life.the third incorporation of anderson as a town occurred on june 9, 1853.the population continued to increase.on august 28, 1865, with a population of nearly 1,300 people, anderson was incorporated as a city.between 1853 and the late 19th century, twenty industries of various sizes located there.on march 31, 1887, natural gas was discovered in anderson.as the indiana gas boom began, this discovery led new businesses that could use natural gas, such as glass-making, to move to the city.anderson grew to such proportions that a cincinnati newspaper editor labeled the city 'the pittsburgh on white river'.other appellations were 'queen city of the gas belt' and (because of the vulcanizing and rubber tire manufacturing business) 'puncture proof city'.in 1897 the interurban railroad was born in anderson.charles henry, a large stock holder, coined the term 'interurban' in 1893.it continued to operate until 1941.the year 1912 spelled disaster for anderson: the natural gas ran out.the city had left its gas-powered lights on day and night, and there are stories of a pocket of natural gas being lit in the river and burning for a prolonged period for the spectacle of it.the result of the loss of natural gas was that several factories moved out.the whole city slowed down.the commercial club (formed on november 18, 1905) was the forerunner of the present chamber of commerce.this club persuaded the remy brothers to stay in anderson and others to locate there.for decades, delco remy and guide lamp (later fisher guide), which during world war ii built the m3 submachine gun and the fp-45 liberator pistol for the allies, were the top two employers in the city.
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melonry | quotingly | pandle
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no related information
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buzz aldrin (; born edwin eugene aldrin jr.; january 20, 1930) is an american former astronaut, engineer and fighter pilot.he made three spacewalks as pilot of the 1966 gemini 12 mission.he was the lunar module eagle pilot on the 1969 apollo 11 mission and became the second person to walk on the moon after mission commander neil armstrong.born in glen ridge, new jersey, aldrin graduated third in the class of 1951 from the united states military academy at west point with a degree in mechanical engineering.he was commissioned into the united states air force and served as a jet fighter pilot during the korean war.he flew 66 combat missions and shot down two mig-15 aircraft.after earning a doctor of science degree in astronautics from the massachusetts institute of technology (mit), aldrin was selected as a member of nasa's astronaut group 3, making him the first astronaut with a doctoral degree.his doctoral thesis, line-of-sight guidance techniques for manned orbital rendezvous, earned him the nickname 'dr. rendezvous' from fellow astronauts.his first space flight was in 1966 on gemini 12, during which he spent over five hours on extravehicular activity.three years later, aldrin set foot on the moon at 03:15:16 on july 21, 1969 (utc), nineteen minutes after armstrong first touched the surface, while command module pilot michael collins remained in lunar orbit.a presbyterian elder, aldrin became the first person to hold a religious ceremony on the moon when he privately took communion.apollo 11 effectively proved u.s. victory in the space race by fulfilling a national goal proposed in 1961 by president john f. kennedy 'of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth' before the end of the decade.after leaving nasa in 1971, aldrin became commandant of the u.s. air force test pilot school.he retired from the air force in 1972, after 21 years of service.his autobiographies return to earth (1973) and magnificent desolation (2009) recount his struggles with clinical depression and alcoholism in the years after leaving nasa.aldrin continues to advocate for space exploration, particularly a human mission to mars, and developed the aldrin cycler, a special spacecraft trajectory that makes travel to mars more efficient in terms of time and propellant.he has been accorded numerous honors, including the presidential medal of freedom in 1969.his parents, edwin eugene aldrin sr. and marion aldrin (née moon), lived in neighboring montclair.his father was an army aviator during world war i and the assistant commandant of the army's test pilot school at mccook field, ohio, from 1919 to 1922, but left the army in 1928 and became an executive at standard oil.aldrin had two sisters: madeleine, who was four years older, and fay ann, who was a year and a half older.his nickname, which became his legal first name in 1988, arose as a result of fay's mispronouncing 'brother' as 'buzzer', which was then shortened to 'buzz'.he was a boy scout, achieving the rank of tenderfoot scout.aldrin did well in school, maintaining an a average.he played football and was the starting center for montclair high school's undefeated 1946 state champion team.his father wanted him to go to the united states naval academy in annapolis, maryland and enrolled him at nearby severn school, a preparatory school for annapolis and even secured him a naval academy appointment from albert w. hawkes, one of the united states senators from new jersey.aldrin attended severn school in 1946, but had other ideas about his future career.he suffered from seasickness and considered ships a distraction from flying airplanes.
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buzz aldrin | birthplace | glen ridge new jersey <tsp> buzz aldrin | nationality | united states <tsp> buzz aldrin | was a crew member of | apollo 11
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born in glen ridge, new jersey, aldrin graduated third in the class of 1951 from the united states military academy at west point with a degree in mechanical engineering.
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the amc matador is a series of american automobiles that were manufactured and marketed by american motors corporation (amc) across two generations, 1971–1973 (mid-size) and 1974–1978 (full-size), in two-door hardtop (first generation) and coupe (second generation) versions, as well as in four-door sedan and station wagon body styles.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.matadors with heavy-duty police equipment were produced from 1971 through 1975.they continued to be in service longer than normal because of favorable field reports.the matador received a redesign in 1974, in part to meet new safety and crash requirements.the most significant change was to the two-door version.the hardtop was the slowest-selling body style in the matador line although it was in a market segment where two-door models were typically the most popular - and also most profitable.as a result, the boxy two-door hardtop body design was replaced with a completely different and sleeker coupe model 'to contend with the bull market for plush mid-size coupes that sprang up after the end of the muscle car era'.it also featured a design that was praised by owners along with their complaints about its low roofline.the design of the matador coupe has been described as 'polarizing' as well as being 'an evocative, swoopy coupe that perfectly captured the design ethos of the era.'factory-backed first-generation hardtops and second-generation coupes competed in nascar stock car racing from 1972 through 1975.drivers included mark donohue and bobby allison winning several races including the 1975 southern 500 at darlington.the amc matador captured five first-place wins.matadors in police livery were featured in television shows and movies during the 1970s.the matador coupe was a featured car and also a scale model of it was used as a flying car in the man with the golden gun, a james bond film released in 1974.
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bicolourous | probate | cosmists <tsp> bicolourous | parochialist | teetan
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no related information
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buzz aldrin (; born edwin eugene aldrin jr.; january 20, 1930) is an american former astronaut, engineer and fighter pilot.he made three spacewalks as pilot of the 1966 gemini 12 mission.he was the lunar module eagle pilot on the 1969 apollo 11 mission and became the second person to walk on the moon after mission commander neil armstrong.born in glen ridge, new jersey, aldrin graduated third in the class of 1951 from the united states military academy at west point with a degree in mechanical engineering.he was commissioned into the united states air force and served as a jet fighter pilot during the korean war.he flew 66 combat missions and shot down two mig-15 aircraft.after earning a doctor of science degree in astronautics from the massachusetts institute of technology (mit), aldrin was selected as a member of nasa's astronaut group 3, making him the first astronaut with a doctoral degree.his doctoral thesis, line-of-sight guidance techniques for manned orbital rendezvous, earned him the nickname 'dr. rendezvous' from fellow astronauts.his first space flight was in 1966 on gemini 12, during which he spent over five hours on extravehicular activity.three years later, aldrin set foot on the moon at 03:15:16 on july 21, 1969 (utc), nineteen minutes after armstrong first touched the surface, while command module pilot michael collins remained in lunar orbit.a presbyterian elder, aldrin became the first person to hold a religious ceremony on the moon when he privately took communion.apollo 11 effectively proved u.s. victory in the space race by fulfilling a national goal proposed in 1961 by president john f. kennedy 'of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the earth' before the end of the decade.after leaving nasa in 1971, aldrin became commandant of the u.s. air force test pilot school.he retired from the air force in 1972, after 21 years of service.his autobiographies return to earth (1973) and magnificent desolation (2009) recount his struggles with clinical depression and alcoholism in the years after leaving nasa.aldrin continues to advocate for space exploration, particularly a human mission to mars, and developed the aldrin cycler, a special spacecraft trajectory that makes travel to mars more efficient in terms of time and propellant.he has been accorded numerous honors, including the presidential medal of freedom in 1969.his parents, edwin eugene aldrin sr. and marion aldrin (née moon), lived in neighboring montclair.his father was an army aviator during world war i and the assistant commandant of the army's test pilot school at mccook field, ohio, from 1919 to 1922, but left the army in 1928 and became an executive at standard oil.aldrin had two sisters: madeleine, who was four years older, and fay ann, who was a year and a half older.his nickname, which became his legal first name in 1988, arose as a result of fay's mispronouncing 'brother' as 'buzzer', which was then shortened to 'buzz'.he was a boy scout, achieving the rank of tenderfoot scout.aldrin did well in school, maintaining an a average.he played football and was the starting center for montclair high school's undefeated 1946 state champion team.his father wanted him to go to the united states naval academy in annapolis, maryland and enrolled him at nearby severn school, a preparatory school for annapolis and even secured him a naval academy appointment from albert w. hawkes, one of the united states senators from new jersey.aldrin attended severn school in 1946, but had other ideas about his future career.he suffered from seasickness and considered ships a distraction from flying airplanes.
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buzz aldrin | birthplace | glen ridge new jersey <tsp> buzz aldrin | nationality | united states <tsp> buzz aldrin | was a crew member of | apollo 11
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born in glen ridge, new jersey, aldrin graduated third in the class of 1951 from the united states military academy at west point with a degree in mechanical engineering.
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angola is a city in pleasant township, steuben county, indiana, united states.the population was 8,612 at the 2010 census.the city is the county seat of steuben county.angola was founded by thomas gale and cornelius gilmore on june 28, 1838, and is home to trine university.the town is served by i-69 and the indiana toll road (i-80 and i-90).the roads are known to the citizens of angola as north and south wayne street and west and east maumee street.according to the 2010 census, angola has a total area of 6.387 square miles (16.54 km2), of which 6.34 square miles (16.42 km2) (or 99.26%) is land and 0.047 square miles (0.12 km2) (or 0.74%) is water.average july temperatures are a maximum of 82.0 °f (27.8 °c) and a minimum of 60.4 °f (15.8 °c).there is an average of 7.5 days with highs of 90 °f (32 °c) or higher.there is an average of 28.1 days with highs of 32 °f (0 °c) or lower and an average of 2.3 days with lows of 0 °f (−18 °c) or lower.the record high temperature was 106 °f (41 °c) on july 13, 1936.the record low temperature was −27 °f (−33 °c) on january 4, 1981.the average annual precipitation is 37.27 inches (947 mm).there is an average of 119.4 days with measurable precipitation.the wettest year was 1950, with 52.48 inches (1,333 mm) and the driest was 1971, with 24.07 inches (611 mm).the most precipitation in one month was 12.23 inches (311 mm) in may 1943.the most precipitation in a 24-hour period was 5.00 inches (127 mm) on july 9, 1951.the average annual snowfall is 34.7 inches (880 mm).there are an average of 22.0 days with measurable snowfall.the snowiest season was 1981–82 with 74.9 inches (1,900 mm).the most snowfall in one month was 31.5 inches (800 mm) in january 1999, including the record 24-hour snowfall of 14.3 inches (360 mm) on january 3, 1999.the population density was 1,358.4 inhabitants per square mile (524.5/km2).there were 3,499 housing units at an average density of 551.9 per square mile (213.1/km2).the racial makeup of the city was 93.6% white, 1.4% african american, 0.3% native american, 0.8% asian, 0.1% pacific islander, 2.1% from other races, and 1.7% from two or more races.hispanic or latino of any race were 6.3% of the population.there were 3,111 households, of which 32.0% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 38.7% were married couples living together, 14.3% had a female householder with no husband present, 5.4% had a male householder with no wife present, and 41.7% were non-families.33.1% of all households were made up of individuals, and 12.2% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older.the average household size was 2.35 and the average family size was 2.99.the median age in the city was 30.3 years.22.1% of residents were under the age of 18; 21.2% were between the ages of 18 and 24; 24% were from 25 to 44; 19.6% were from 45 to 64; and 13% were 65 years of age or older.the gender makeup of the city was 50.6% male and 49.4% female.the population density was 1,736.4 inhabitants per square mile (670.4/km2).there were 3,012 housing units at an average density of 712.1 per square mile (274.9/km2).the racial makeup of the city was 94.00% white, 0.82% african american, 0.44% native american, 1.23% asian, 0.04% pacific islander, 1.92% from other races, and 1.57% from two or more races.
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angola indiana | areatotal | 1655 square kilometres <tsp> angola indiana | elevationabovethesealevel | 3240 <tsp> angola indiana | populationdensity | 5245 inhabitants per square kilometre
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according to the 2010 census, angola has a total area of 6.387 square miles (16.54 km2), of which 6.34 square miles (16.42 km2) (or 99.26%) is land and 0.047 square miles (0.12 km2) (or 0.74%) is water.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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mesocentrous | squooshes | vivas
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angola is a city in pleasant township, steuben county, indiana, united states.the population was 8,612 at the 2010 census.the city is the county seat of steuben county.angola was founded by thomas gale and cornelius gilmore on june 28, 1838, and is home to trine university.the town is served by i-69 and the indiana toll road (i-80 and i-90).the roads are known to the citizens of angola as north and south wayne street and west and east maumee street.according to the 2010 census, angola has a total area of 6.387 square miles (16.54 km2), of which 6.34 square miles (16.42 km2) (or 99.26%) is land and 0.047 square miles (0.12 km2) (or 0.74%) is water.average july temperatures are a maximum of 82.0 °f (27.8 °c) and a minimum of 60.4 °f (15.8 °c).there is an average of 7.5 days with highs of 90 °f (32 °c) or higher.there is an average of 28.1 days with highs of 32 °f (0 °c) or lower and an average of 2.3 days with lows of 0 °f (−18 °c) or lower.the record high temperature was 106 °f (41 °c) on july 13, 1936.the record low temperature was −27 °f (−33 °c) on january 4, 1981.the average annual precipitation is 37.27 inches (947 mm).there is an average of 119.4 days with measurable precipitation.the wettest year was 1950, with 52.48 inches (1,333 mm) and the driest was 1971, with 24.07 inches (611 mm).the most precipitation in one month was 12.23 inches (311 mm) in may 1943.the most precipitation in a 24-hour period was 5.00 inches (127 mm) on july 9, 1951.the average annual snowfall is 34.7 inches (880 mm).there are an average of 22.0 days with measurable snowfall.the snowiest season was 1981–82 with 74.9 inches (1,900 mm).the most snowfall in one month was 31.5 inches (800 mm) in january 1999, including the record 24-hour snowfall of 14.3 inches (360 mm) on january 3, 1999.the population density was 1,358.4 inhabitants per square mile (524.5/km2).there were 3,499 housing units at an average density of 551.9 per square mile (213.1/km2).the racial makeup of the city was 93.6% white, 1.4% african american, 0.3% native american, 0.8% asian, 0.1% pacific islander, 2.1% from other races, and 1.7% from two or more races.hispanic or latino of any race were 6.3% of the population.there were 3,111 households, of which 32.0% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 38.7% were married couples living together, 14.3% had a female householder with no husband present, 5.4% had a male householder with no wife present, and 41.7% were non-families.33.1% of all households were made up of individuals, and 12.2% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older.the average household size was 2.35 and the average family size was 2.99.the median age in the city was 30.3 years.22.1% of residents were under the age of 18; 21.2% were between the ages of 18 and 24; 24% were from 25 to 44; 19.6% were from 45 to 64; and 13% were 65 years of age or older.the gender makeup of the city was 50.6% male and 49.4% female.the population density was 1,736.4 inhabitants per square mile (670.4/km2).there were 3,012 housing units at an average density of 712.1 per square mile (274.9/km2).the racial makeup of the city was 94.00% white, 0.82% african american, 0.44% native american, 1.23% asian, 0.04% pacific islander, 1.92% from other races, and 1.57% from two or more races.
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angola indiana | areatotal | 1655 square kilometres <tsp> angola indiana | elevationabovethesealevel | 3240 <tsp> angola indiana | populationdensity | 5245 inhabitants per square kilometre
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according to the 2010 census, angola has a total area of 6.387 square miles (16.54 km2), of which 6.34 square miles (16.42 km2) (or 99.26%) is land and 0.047 square miles (0.12 km2) (or 0.74%) is water.
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aaron hunt (born 4 september 1986) is a german former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.he spent most of his career at werder bremen, making his first-team debut at the age of 18.in the bundesliga, he also represented vfl wolfsburg and hamburger sv, winning the dfb-pokal with the first club as well as the second.hunt won three caps for germany, his first coming in 2009.after spending his first season at werder bremen in the reserves the year the first team achieved the double, he made his bundesliga debut on 18 september 2004, coming on as a substitute in a 3–0 home win against hannover 96.on his first appearance in the starting line-up, against borussia mönchengladbach on 12 february 2005, he scored his first goal, becoming the club's youngest-ever goalscorer at the age of 18 years and 161 days.early in 2006, hunt suffered a mysterious knee injury, which after some months was found to be bursitis.as a result, he missed the remainder of the season following the winter break.in november, he renewed his contract until 2010 and, on 3 march 2007, netted a hat-trick in the 3–0 league victory over vfl bochum.he finished that campaign with nine goals, and his team eventually ranked third behind vfb stuttgart and schalke 04.hunt scored a career-best 11 goals in 2012–13, but werder could only finish in 14th place.in march 2014, after being awarded a penalty during a match against 1.fc nürnberg, he successfully asked the referee to reverse his decision, because the opposition player had not touched him.he made his debut for his new club on 17 august in a 5–4 penalty shoot–out win against darmstadt 98 in the dfb-pokal, being replaced at the start of extra time.his first league appearance came five days later, in a 2–1 loss at bayern munich.hunt scored his first goal for the wolves on 21 september 2014, in a 4–1 defeat of bayer leverkusen at the volkswagen arena.he made his european debut the following week in a 4–1 loss to everton, and netted for the first time in the uefa europa league on 6 november of that year, his brace helping the hosts to a 5–1 rout of krasnodar; he finished the season with four goals in 22 competitive appearances.he finished his first year at volksparkstadion with one goal in 21 matches, scoring four goals from 26 total games the following campaign.hunt made 30 appearances in all competitions in 2017–18 (29 in the league), netting three times as the club was relegated to the 2.bundesliga for the first time in its history.in the ensuing off-season, he was made new team captain after stripping gōtoku sakai of that role.after hunt's contract was not extended, he announced his retirement in february 2022 at the age of 35.he played over 400 league matches in the top three tiers of the german league pyramid.his mother's family all hailed from the london area, and his grandfather went to the same north-east school as bobby charlton.however, hunt stated that he would only play for his birth nation.when asked which team he would represent at international level, he said he was '... honoured about this.but i have decided to play for germany....', adding that he was steadfast on his decision.in october 2006, hunt appeared for the german under-21s in a 1–0 loss against england in coventry for the 2007 uefa european championship qualification playoff (eventually 3–0 on aggregate).in november 2006, hunt was charged by uefa for serious unsporting behaviour, after complaints of racist remarks in the second leg of the under-21 playoff against england.
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igniferousness | zelanian | counterefficiency
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