text
stringlengths 103
5.76k
| query
stringlengths 18
640
| summary
stringlengths 22
3.89k
|
---|---|---|
fc spartak moscow (russian: футбольный клуб «спартак» москва, romanized: futbolʹnyy klub «spartak» moskva, pronounced [spɐrˈtak mɐˈskva]) is a russian professional football club based in moscow.having won 12 soviet championships (second only to dynamo kyiv) and a record 10 russian championships, it is the country's most successful club.they have also won a record 10 soviet cups, 4 russian cups and one russian super cup.spartak have also reached the semi-finals of all three european club competitions.many statesmen saw in the wins of their teams the superiority over the opponents patronising other teams.almost all the teams had such kind of patrons; dynamo moscow aligned with the militsiya, cska moscow with the red army, and spartak, created by a trade union public organization, was considered to be 'the people's team'.the history of the football club and sports society 'spartak' originates from the russian gymnastics society (rgo 'sokol'), which was founded on 16 may 1883.the society was founded under the influence of the pan-slavic 'sokol movement' with the aim of promoting the 'sokolsk gymnastics' and then sports including fencing, wrestling, figure skating, skating, football, hockey, lawn tennis, boxing, skis, athletics, and cycling.in the rgo sokol began to play football in the summer of 1897; the professional football section was founded in the spring of 1909.on 1 august 1920, the football team began to officially act under the name mcs, or moscow sports club.in 1923, the mcs, later named krasnaya presnya (red presnya), was formed by ivan artemyev and involved nikolai starostin, especially in its football team.presnya is a district of moscow renowned for the radical politics of its inhabitants; for example, it represented the centre of the moscow uprising of 1905.the team grew, building a stadium, supporting itself from ticket sales and playing matches across the russian sfsr.as part of a 1926 reorganization of football in the soviet union, starostin arranged for the club to be sponsored by the food workers union and the club moved to the 13,000 seat tomsky stadium, known as pishcheviki.the team changed sponsors repeatedly over the following years as it competed with dinamo moscow, whose 35,000 seat dynamo stadium lay close by.as a high-profile sportsman, starostin came into close contact with alexander kosarev, secretary of the komsomol (communist union of youth) who already had a strong influence on sport and wanted to extend it.in november 1934, with funding from promkooperatsiia, kosarev employed starostin and his brothers to develop his team to make it more powerful.again the team changed its name, this time to 'spartak moscow' (the name spartak means 'spartacus', a gladiator who led an uprising against ancient rome).the club founders, four starostin brothers, played a big role in the formation of the team.the starostins played for the red-whites in the 1930s but right before world war ii they were subjected to repression as the leaders of the most hated team by the state authorities.elder brother nikolai starostin wrote in his books that he had survived in the state prison system due to his participation in football and with spartak (after the political rehabilitation, in 1954, he would later return to the team as the squad's manager).in 1935, starostin proposed the name spartak.it was inspired by the italian novel spartaco, written by raffaello giovagnoli, and means spartacus ('spartak' in russian), a gladiator-slave who led a rebellion against rome.starostin is also credited with the creation of the spartak logo.the same year, the club became a part of newly created spartak sports society.czechoslovak manager antonin fivebr is credited as the first head coach of spartak, though he worked as a consultant in several clubs simultaneously. | fc spartak moscow | chairman | sergey rodionov | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | bidets | glycogelatin | tamaulipecan | no related information |
fc spartak moscow (russian: футбольный клуб «спартак» москва, romanized: futbolʹnyy klub «spartak» moskva, pronounced [spɐrˈtak mɐˈskva]) is a russian professional football club based in moscow.having won 12 soviet championships (second only to dynamo kyiv) and a record 10 russian championships, it is the country's most successful club.they have also won a record 10 soviet cups, 4 russian cups and one russian super cup.spartak have also reached the semi-finals of all three european club competitions.many statesmen saw in the wins of their teams the superiority over the opponents patronising other teams.almost all the teams had such kind of patrons; dynamo moscow aligned with the militsiya, cska moscow with the red army, and spartak, created by a trade union public organization, was considered to be 'the people's team'.the history of the football club and sports society 'spartak' originates from the russian gymnastics society (rgo 'sokol'), which was founded on 16 may 1883.the society was founded under the influence of the pan-slavic 'sokol movement' with the aim of promoting the 'sokolsk gymnastics' and then sports including fencing, wrestling, figure skating, skating, football, hockey, lawn tennis, boxing, skis, athletics, and cycling.in the rgo sokol began to play football in the summer of 1897; the professional football section was founded in the spring of 1909.on 1 august 1920, the football team began to officially act under the name mcs, or moscow sports club.in 1923, the mcs, later named krasnaya presnya (red presnya), was formed by ivan artemyev and involved nikolai starostin, especially in its football team.presnya is a district of moscow renowned for the radical politics of its inhabitants; for example, it represented the centre of the moscow uprising of 1905.the team grew, building a stadium, supporting itself from ticket sales and playing matches across the russian sfsr.as part of a 1926 reorganization of football in the soviet union, starostin arranged for the club to be sponsored by the food workers union and the club moved to the 13,000 seat tomsky stadium, known as pishcheviki.the team changed sponsors repeatedly over the following years as it competed with dinamo moscow, whose 35,000 seat dynamo stadium lay close by.as a high-profile sportsman, starostin came into close contact with alexander kosarev, secretary of the komsomol (communist union of youth) who already had a strong influence on sport and wanted to extend it.in november 1934, with funding from promkooperatsiia, kosarev employed starostin and his brothers to develop his team to make it more powerful.again the team changed its name, this time to 'spartak moscow' (the name spartak means 'spartacus', a gladiator who led an uprising against ancient rome).the club founders, four starostin brothers, played a big role in the formation of the team.the starostins played for the red-whites in the 1930s but right before world war ii they were subjected to repression as the leaders of the most hated team by the state authorities.elder brother nikolai starostin wrote in his books that he had survived in the state prison system due to his participation in football and with spartak (after the political rehabilitation, in 1954, he would later return to the team as the squad's manager).in 1935, starostin proposed the name spartak.it was inspired by the italian novel spartaco, written by raffaello giovagnoli, and means spartacus ('spartak' in russian), a gladiator-slave who led a rebellion against rome.starostin is also credited with the creation of the spartak logo.the same year, the club became a part of newly created spartak sports society.czechoslovak manager antonin fivebr is credited as the first head coach of spartak, though he worked as a consultant in several clubs simultaneously. | fc spartak moscow | chairman | sergey rodionov | no related information |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | turkey | largestcity | istanbul | ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre. |
alcatraz versus the evil librarians is a juvenile novel written by american author brandon sanderson, published in october 2007 by scholastic press.the book is named after its main character, alcatraz smedry.after receiving a bag of sand for his thirteenth birthday, he is involved in a very strange set of events.the book starts with alcatraz setting fire to his foster parents' kitchen.it is revealed that he has been in countless foster homes, always ending up with alcatraz 'destroying' things precious to the people taking care of him.ms. fletcher, alcatraz's personal caseworker, arrives and scolds him for destroying his foster parents' kitchen.the next day an old man arrives at the house and claims to be his grandfather, telling alcatraz that he has a special, powerful talent, breaking things.after the old man finds alcatraz's bag of sand missing, he and alcatraz must go on a mission to recover it at all cost from the evil librarians, secret rulers of the world.these freedom fighters include alcatraz's grandfather, leavenworth smedry, usually just referred to as 'grandpa smedry'; bastille, grandpa's bodyguard and a crystin knight; sing sing - sing for short - alcatraz's polynesian cousin; and quentin, another cousin.the librarians include shasta / ms. fletcher, alcatraz's case worker and radrian blackburn, a dark oculator.alcatraz has the talent of breaking things.grandpa smedry, alcatraz's grandfather, has the power to arrive late.as such, he is always running behind the clock.but his power also allows him to arrive late to other things, like bullets, which always miss him, and his blood can arrive late to wounds so that he doesn't bleed to death.in his own words 'i've been arriving late to my own death for longer than you've been alive.'sing, alcatraz's cousin's talent is the ability to trip and fall to the ground.this helps when this is a sign of danger.quentin, another cousin, has the talent to speak gibberish or nonsensical phrases.his talent proves beneficial when he is captured by the librarians, as they cannot understand him and thus cannot gain important information from him, even through torture.it is through some of quentin's supposed gibberish that alcatraz is prompted to know what to do in future events.smedrys from ancient days had grand talents, though relatively unexplained.one could get unbelievable amounts of water on the ground when she did the dishes, which allowed her to end a drought.another could make rude noises at inappropriate moments, breaking enemies' concentration so they could not use weapons.if someone not related to the smedrys marries a smedry, the person marrying into the family gets their spouse's talent.a third alcatraz book, called alcatraz versus the knights of crystallia, was released on october 1, 2009, and the fourth book, alcatraz versus the shattered lens, was released on december 1, 2010.since scholastic only commissioned the first four books, and was unwilling to publish the fifth book, sanderson bought back the rights to the series in early 2013.he later sold the series to tor books who then republished the series.the fifth book of the series, entitled the dark talent, was released september 6, 2016.tor books reprinted the first five books in a paperback box set, then published the sixth book in the series, alcatraz bastille vs. the evil librarians, on september 20, 2022, which was co-authored by janci patterson.on january 3, 2011, brandon sanderson, the author of the novel, tweeted that dreamworks did not renew the rights. | alibangbang | misapplying | nonintellectuals <tsp> alibangbang | resorcinolphthalein | gibing | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | nongraciously | reckling | osteodystrophy | no related information |
alcatraz versus the evil librarians is a juvenile novel written by american author brandon sanderson, published in october 2007 by scholastic press.the book is named after its main character, alcatraz smedry.after receiving a bag of sand for his thirteenth birthday, he is involved in a very strange set of events.the book starts with alcatraz setting fire to his foster parents' kitchen.it is revealed that he has been in countless foster homes, always ending up with alcatraz 'destroying' things precious to the people taking care of him.ms. fletcher, alcatraz's personal caseworker, arrives and scolds him for destroying his foster parents' kitchen.the next day an old man arrives at the house and claims to be his grandfather, telling alcatraz that he has a special, powerful talent, breaking things.after the old man finds alcatraz's bag of sand missing, he and alcatraz must go on a mission to recover it at all cost from the evil librarians, secret rulers of the world.these freedom fighters include alcatraz's grandfather, leavenworth smedry, usually just referred to as 'grandpa smedry'; bastille, grandpa's bodyguard and a crystin knight; sing sing - sing for short - alcatraz's polynesian cousin; and quentin, another cousin.the librarians include shasta / ms. fletcher, alcatraz's case worker and radrian blackburn, a dark oculator.alcatraz has the talent of breaking things.grandpa smedry, alcatraz's grandfather, has the power to arrive late.as such, he is always running behind the clock.but his power also allows him to arrive late to other things, like bullets, which always miss him, and his blood can arrive late to wounds so that he doesn't bleed to death.in his own words 'i've been arriving late to my own death for longer than you've been alive.'sing, alcatraz's cousin's talent is the ability to trip and fall to the ground.this helps when this is a sign of danger.quentin, another cousin, has the talent to speak gibberish or nonsensical phrases.his talent proves beneficial when he is captured by the librarians, as they cannot understand him and thus cannot gain important information from him, even through torture.it is through some of quentin's supposed gibberish that alcatraz is prompted to know what to do in future events.smedrys from ancient days had grand talents, though relatively unexplained.one could get unbelievable amounts of water on the ground when she did the dishes, which allowed her to end a drought.another could make rude noises at inappropriate moments, breaking enemies' concentration so they could not use weapons.if someone not related to the smedrys marries a smedry, the person marrying into the family gets their spouse's talent.a third alcatraz book, called alcatraz versus the knights of crystallia, was released on october 1, 2009, and the fourth book, alcatraz versus the shattered lens, was released on december 1, 2010.since scholastic only commissioned the first four books, and was unwilling to publish the fifth book, sanderson bought back the rights to the series in early 2013.he later sold the series to tor books who then republished the series.the fifth book of the series, entitled the dark talent, was released september 6, 2016.tor books reprinted the first five books in a paperback box set, then published the sixth book in the series, alcatraz bastille vs. the evil librarians, on september 20, 2022, which was co-authored by janci patterson.on january 3, 2011, brandon sanderson, the author of the novel, tweeted that dreamworks did not renew the rights. | alcatraz versus the evil librarians | numberofpages | 320 | no related information |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | turkey | largestcity | istanbul | ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre. |
fc spartak moscow (russian: футбольный клуб «спартак» москва, romanized: futbolʹnyy klub «spartak» moskva, pronounced [spɐrˈtak mɐˈskva]) is a russian professional football club based in moscow.having won 12 soviet championships (second only to dynamo kyiv) and a record 10 russian championships, it is the country's most successful club.they have also won a record 10 soviet cups, 4 russian cups and one russian super cup.spartak have also reached the semi-finals of all three european club competitions.many statesmen saw in the wins of their teams the superiority over the opponents patronising other teams.almost all the teams had such kind of patrons; dynamo moscow aligned with the militsiya, cska moscow with the red army, and spartak, created by a trade union public organization, was considered to be 'the people's team'.the history of the football club and sports society 'spartak' originates from the russian gymnastics society (rgo 'sokol'), which was founded on 16 may 1883.the society was founded under the influence of the pan-slavic 'sokol movement' with the aim of promoting the 'sokolsk gymnastics' and then sports including fencing, wrestling, figure skating, skating, football, hockey, lawn tennis, boxing, skis, athletics, and cycling.in the rgo sokol began to play football in the summer of 1897; the professional football section was founded in the spring of 1909.on 1 august 1920, the football team began to officially act under the name mcs, or moscow sports club.in 1923, the mcs, later named krasnaya presnya (red presnya), was formed by ivan artemyev and involved nikolai starostin, especially in its football team.presnya is a district of moscow renowned for the radical politics of its inhabitants; for example, it represented the centre of the moscow uprising of 1905.the team grew, building a stadium, supporting itself from ticket sales and playing matches across the russian sfsr.as part of a 1926 reorganization of football in the soviet union, starostin arranged for the club to be sponsored by the food workers union and the club moved to the 13,000 seat tomsky stadium, known as pishcheviki.the team changed sponsors repeatedly over the following years as it competed with dinamo moscow, whose 35,000 seat dynamo stadium lay close by.as a high-profile sportsman, starostin came into close contact with alexander kosarev, secretary of the komsomol (communist union of youth) who already had a strong influence on sport and wanted to extend it.in november 1934, with funding from promkooperatsiia, kosarev employed starostin and his brothers to develop his team to make it more powerful.again the team changed its name, this time to 'spartak moscow' (the name spartak means 'spartacus', a gladiator who led an uprising against ancient rome).the club founders, four starostin brothers, played a big role in the formation of the team.the starostins played for the red-whites in the 1930s but right before world war ii they were subjected to repression as the leaders of the most hated team by the state authorities.elder brother nikolai starostin wrote in his books that he had survived in the state prison system due to his participation in football and with spartak (after the political rehabilitation, in 1954, he would later return to the team as the squad's manager).in 1935, starostin proposed the name spartak.it was inspired by the italian novel spartaco, written by raffaello giovagnoli, and means spartacus ('spartak' in russian), a gladiator-slave who led a rebellion against rome.starostin is also credited with the creation of the spartak logo.the same year, the club became a part of newly created spartak sports society.czechoslovak manager antonin fivebr is credited as the first head coach of spartak, though he worked as a consultant in several clubs simultaneously. | coulter | pentandrous | rationalizing <tsp> coulter | piaffe | chronos | no related information |
alcatraz versus the evil librarians is a juvenile novel written by american author brandon sanderson, published in october 2007 by scholastic press.the book is named after its main character, alcatraz smedry.after receiving a bag of sand for his thirteenth birthday, he is involved in a very strange set of events.the book starts with alcatraz setting fire to his foster parents' kitchen.it is revealed that he has been in countless foster homes, always ending up with alcatraz 'destroying' things precious to the people taking care of him.ms. fletcher, alcatraz's personal caseworker, arrives and scolds him for destroying his foster parents' kitchen.the next day an old man arrives at the house and claims to be his grandfather, telling alcatraz that he has a special, powerful talent, breaking things.after the old man finds alcatraz's bag of sand missing, he and alcatraz must go on a mission to recover it at all cost from the evil librarians, secret rulers of the world.these freedom fighters include alcatraz's grandfather, leavenworth smedry, usually just referred to as 'grandpa smedry'; bastille, grandpa's bodyguard and a crystin knight; sing sing - sing for short - alcatraz's polynesian cousin; and quentin, another cousin.the librarians include shasta / ms. fletcher, alcatraz's case worker and radrian blackburn, a dark oculator.alcatraz has the talent of breaking things.grandpa smedry, alcatraz's grandfather, has the power to arrive late.as such, he is always running behind the clock.but his power also allows him to arrive late to other things, like bullets, which always miss him, and his blood can arrive late to wounds so that he doesn't bleed to death.in his own words 'i've been arriving late to my own death for longer than you've been alive.'sing, alcatraz's cousin's talent is the ability to trip and fall to the ground.this helps when this is a sign of danger.quentin, another cousin, has the talent to speak gibberish or nonsensical phrases.his talent proves beneficial when he is captured by the librarians, as they cannot understand him and thus cannot gain important information from him, even through torture.it is through some of quentin's supposed gibberish that alcatraz is prompted to know what to do in future events.smedrys from ancient days had grand talents, though relatively unexplained.one could get unbelievable amounts of water on the ground when she did the dishes, which allowed her to end a drought.another could make rude noises at inappropriate moments, breaking enemies' concentration so they could not use weapons.if someone not related to the smedrys marries a smedry, the person marrying into the family gets their spouse's talent.a third alcatraz book, called alcatraz versus the knights of crystallia, was released on october 1, 2009, and the fourth book, alcatraz versus the shattered lens, was released on december 1, 2010.since scholastic only commissioned the first four books, and was unwilling to publish the fifth book, sanderson bought back the rights to the series in early 2013.he later sold the series to tor books who then republished the series.the fifth book of the series, entitled the dark talent, was released september 6, 2016.tor books reprinted the first five books in a paperback box set, then published the sixth book in the series, alcatraz bastille vs. the evil librarians, on september 20, 2022, which was co-authored by janci patterson.on january 3, 2011, brandon sanderson, the author of the novel, tweeted that dreamworks did not renew the rights. | alcatraz versus the evil librarians | numberofpages | 320 | no related information |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | turkey | largestcity | istanbul | ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre. |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | zincid | calkins | monomethylamine <tsp> zincid | pansinuitis | nucleuses | no related information |
fc spartak moscow (russian: футбольный клуб «спартак» москва, romanized: futbolʹnyy klub «spartak» moskva, pronounced [spɐrˈtak mɐˈskva]) is a russian professional football club based in moscow.having won 12 soviet championships (second only to dynamo kyiv) and a record 10 russian championships, it is the country's most successful club.they have also won a record 10 soviet cups, 4 russian cups and one russian super cup.spartak have also reached the semi-finals of all three european club competitions.many statesmen saw in the wins of their teams the superiority over the opponents patronising other teams.almost all the teams had such kind of patrons; dynamo moscow aligned with the militsiya, cska moscow with the red army, and spartak, created by a trade union public organization, was considered to be 'the people's team'.the history of the football club and sports society 'spartak' originates from the russian gymnastics society (rgo 'sokol'), which was founded on 16 may 1883.the society was founded under the influence of the pan-slavic 'sokol movement' with the aim of promoting the 'sokolsk gymnastics' and then sports including fencing, wrestling, figure skating, skating, football, hockey, lawn tennis, boxing, skis, athletics, and cycling.in the rgo sokol began to play football in the summer of 1897; the professional football section was founded in the spring of 1909.on 1 august 1920, the football team began to officially act under the name mcs, or moscow sports club.in 1923, the mcs, later named krasnaya presnya (red presnya), was formed by ivan artemyev and involved nikolai starostin, especially in its football team.presnya is a district of moscow renowned for the radical politics of its inhabitants; for example, it represented the centre of the moscow uprising of 1905.the team grew, building a stadium, supporting itself from ticket sales and playing matches across the russian sfsr.as part of a 1926 reorganization of football in the soviet union, starostin arranged for the club to be sponsored by the food workers union and the club moved to the 13,000 seat tomsky stadium, known as pishcheviki.the team changed sponsors repeatedly over the following years as it competed with dinamo moscow, whose 35,000 seat dynamo stadium lay close by.as a high-profile sportsman, starostin came into close contact with alexander kosarev, secretary of the komsomol (communist union of youth) who already had a strong influence on sport and wanted to extend it.in november 1934, with funding from promkooperatsiia, kosarev employed starostin and his brothers to develop his team to make it more powerful.again the team changed its name, this time to 'spartak moscow' (the name spartak means 'spartacus', a gladiator who led an uprising against ancient rome).the club founders, four starostin brothers, played a big role in the formation of the team.the starostins played for the red-whites in the 1930s but right before world war ii they were subjected to repression as the leaders of the most hated team by the state authorities.elder brother nikolai starostin wrote in his books that he had survived in the state prison system due to his participation in football and with spartak (after the political rehabilitation, in 1954, he would later return to the team as the squad's manager).in 1935, starostin proposed the name spartak.it was inspired by the italian novel spartaco, written by raffaello giovagnoli, and means spartacus ('spartak' in russian), a gladiator-slave who led a rebellion against rome.starostin is also credited with the creation of the spartak logo.the same year, the club became a part of newly created spartak sports society.czechoslovak manager antonin fivebr is credited as the first head coach of spartak, though he worked as a consultant in several clubs simultaneously. | fc spartak moscow | ground | otkrytiye arena | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | ardmore airport new zealand | elevationabovethesealevel in metres | 340 | no related information |
alcatraz versus the scrivener's bones is a juvenile fiction novel written by american author brandon sanderson, published in november 2008 by scholastic press.it is preceded by alcatraz versus the evil librarians.sanderson continues the series as alcatraz goes to the library of alexandria and tries to rescue his dad and grandfather from the soul stealing library curators.once he arrives he is immediately separated from the rest of the group consisting of bastille and her mother draulin, alcatraz's uncle kazan, and alcatraz's cousin australia.alcatraz is travelling through the library alone and he is often pestered by the curators who ask him to take a book at the cost of his soul.the curators speak long forgotten languages which he can understand because of his translator's lenses.at one point alcatraz finds bastille caught in a net, and he breaks the ropes that bind her.after bastille and alcatraz continue to venture kazan finds them by utilizing his talent of getting lost.he finds them because they are both abstractly lost.soon after the three travel the library with kazan's talent they activate another trip wire which encloses them in a hardened goo.alcatraz escapes by biting through it, and his friends follow suit.along the way he finds the tomb of alcatraz the first, who was the first wielder of the breaking talent.his tomb does not age because he broke time.at the tomb he also finds a note which informs him that his talent is more of a curse than a blessing.after activating yet a third trip wire bastille and alcatraz fall into a pit.after a lengthy (and awkward) discussion about responsibility, they escape using windstormer's lenses and proceed to fight the scrivener's bones—a sect of dark oculators.they defeat him by tricking him into checking out a book, then the curators take his soul.later, they find grandpa smedry crying over a note.it is revealed that indeed, attica smedry (alcatraz's father) has sold his soul for all the knowledge in the world.but, in claiming a note written before he was turned into a curator, alcatraz learns of a way to turn him back.kilimanjaro, a scrivener's bone (a sect of cyborg-like librarians who replace parts of their bodies with alivened technology), attempts to capture alcatraz and his clan throughout the book.floating around the library are the always-present curators of alexandria, who will let you pick up any book in the library - at the cost of your soul.a fourth book, alcatraz versus the shattered lens, was published in 2010.the final book in the series alcatraz versus the dark talent was published in 2016.oculators are the only ones who have the ability to use the lenses.the lenses mentioned in the first two books in the series are: oculator's lenses, which highlight unusual objects and allow the wearer to see unusual things firebringer's lenses, which shoot heat rays tracker's lenses, which let the wearer see colored footprints of people (the longer you know a person or the closer their relation to you, the more brightly the prints appear and the longer the prints last) shocker's lenses, which cause people to pass out translator's lenses (a/k/a the lenses of rashid), which let the wearer read or write in any language or code torturer's lenses, which cause pain to any person the wearer focuses on courier's lenses, which carry messages to other oculators windstomer's lenses, which push things away with a gust of wind voidstomer's lenses, which uses low air pressure to pull things toward it frostbringer's lenses, which shoot a beam of icy frost discerner's lenses, which tell the wearer the relative age of an object harrier's lenses, which have a power not yet detailed at this point in the series transcriber's lenses, which have a power to translate other languages and make you understand different languages truthfinders lens if the person is lying bugs will come out of there mouth if they are telling the truth mist will come out of there mouthalso mentioned is a method of making lenses that can be used by non-oculators; however, making these lenses requires the blood of an oculator obtained via sacrifice. | reavail | isochoric | festivally <tsp> reavail | trisulfid | undersupport | no related information |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | tan | pangasinan | citee | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | ardmore airport new zealand | elevationabovethesealevel in metres | 340 | no related information |
fc spartak moscow (russian: футбольный клуб «спартак» москва, romanized: futbolʹnyy klub «spartak» moskva, pronounced [spɐrˈtak mɐˈskva]) is a russian professional football club based in moscow.having won 12 soviet championships (second only to dynamo kyiv) and a record 10 russian championships, it is the country's most successful club.they have also won a record 10 soviet cups, 4 russian cups and one russian super cup.spartak have also reached the semi-finals of all three european club competitions.many statesmen saw in the wins of their teams the superiority over the opponents patronising other teams.almost all the teams had such kind of patrons; dynamo moscow aligned with the militsiya, cska moscow with the red army, and spartak, created by a trade union public organization, was considered to be 'the people's team'.the history of the football club and sports society 'spartak' originates from the russian gymnastics society (rgo 'sokol'), which was founded on 16 may 1883.the society was founded under the influence of the pan-slavic 'sokol movement' with the aim of promoting the 'sokolsk gymnastics' and then sports including fencing, wrestling, figure skating, skating, football, hockey, lawn tennis, boxing, skis, athletics, and cycling.in the rgo sokol began to play football in the summer of 1897; the professional football section was founded in the spring of 1909.on 1 august 1920, the football team began to officially act under the name mcs, or moscow sports club.in 1923, the mcs, later named krasnaya presnya (red presnya), was formed by ivan artemyev and involved nikolai starostin, especially in its football team.presnya is a district of moscow renowned for the radical politics of its inhabitants; for example, it represented the centre of the moscow uprising of 1905.the team grew, building a stadium, supporting itself from ticket sales and playing matches across the russian sfsr.as part of a 1926 reorganization of football in the soviet union, starostin arranged for the club to be sponsored by the food workers union and the club moved to the 13,000 seat tomsky stadium, known as pishcheviki.the team changed sponsors repeatedly over the following years as it competed with dinamo moscow, whose 35,000 seat dynamo stadium lay close by.as a high-profile sportsman, starostin came into close contact with alexander kosarev, secretary of the komsomol (communist union of youth) who already had a strong influence on sport and wanted to extend it.in november 1934, with funding from promkooperatsiia, kosarev employed starostin and his brothers to develop his team to make it more powerful.again the team changed its name, this time to 'spartak moscow' (the name spartak means 'spartacus', a gladiator who led an uprising against ancient rome).the club founders, four starostin brothers, played a big role in the formation of the team.the starostins played for the red-whites in the 1930s but right before world war ii they were subjected to repression as the leaders of the most hated team by the state authorities.elder brother nikolai starostin wrote in his books that he had survived in the state prison system due to his participation in football and with spartak (after the political rehabilitation, in 1954, he would later return to the team as the squad's manager).in 1935, starostin proposed the name spartak.it was inspired by the italian novel spartaco, written by raffaello giovagnoli, and means spartacus ('spartak' in russian), a gladiator-slave who led a rebellion against rome.starostin is also credited with the creation of the spartak logo.the same year, the club became a part of newly created spartak sports society.czechoslovak manager antonin fivebr is credited as the first head coach of spartak, though he worked as a consultant in several clubs simultaneously. | antelude | lis | improvableness <tsp> antelude | anagnorises | bugsha | no related information |
alcatraz versus the scrivener's bones is a juvenile fiction novel written by american author brandon sanderson, published in november 2008 by scholastic press.it is preceded by alcatraz versus the evil librarians.sanderson continues the series as alcatraz goes to the library of alexandria and tries to rescue his dad and grandfather from the soul stealing library curators.once he arrives he is immediately separated from the rest of the group consisting of bastille and her mother draulin, alcatraz's uncle kazan, and alcatraz's cousin australia.alcatraz is travelling through the library alone and he is often pestered by the curators who ask him to take a book at the cost of his soul.the curators speak long forgotten languages which he can understand because of his translator's lenses.at one point alcatraz finds bastille caught in a net, and he breaks the ropes that bind her.after bastille and alcatraz continue to venture kazan finds them by utilizing his talent of getting lost.he finds them because they are both abstractly lost.soon after the three travel the library with kazan's talent they activate another trip wire which encloses them in a hardened goo.alcatraz escapes by biting through it, and his friends follow suit.along the way he finds the tomb of alcatraz the first, who was the first wielder of the breaking talent.his tomb does not age because he broke time.at the tomb he also finds a note which informs him that his talent is more of a curse than a blessing.after activating yet a third trip wire bastille and alcatraz fall into a pit.after a lengthy (and awkward) discussion about responsibility, they escape using windstormer's lenses and proceed to fight the scrivener's bones—a sect of dark oculators.they defeat him by tricking him into checking out a book, then the curators take his soul.later, they find grandpa smedry crying over a note.it is revealed that indeed, attica smedry (alcatraz's father) has sold his soul for all the knowledge in the world.but, in claiming a note written before he was turned into a curator, alcatraz learns of a way to turn him back.kilimanjaro, a scrivener's bone (a sect of cyborg-like librarians who replace parts of their bodies with alivened technology), attempts to capture alcatraz and his clan throughout the book.floating around the library are the always-present curators of alexandria, who will let you pick up any book in the library - at the cost of your soul.a fourth book, alcatraz versus the shattered lens, was published in 2010.the final book in the series alcatraz versus the dark talent was published in 2016.oculators are the only ones who have the ability to use the lenses.the lenses mentioned in the first two books in the series are: oculator's lenses, which highlight unusual objects and allow the wearer to see unusual things firebringer's lenses, which shoot heat rays tracker's lenses, which let the wearer see colored footprints of people (the longer you know a person or the closer their relation to you, the more brightly the prints appear and the longer the prints last) shocker's lenses, which cause people to pass out translator's lenses (a/k/a the lenses of rashid), which let the wearer read or write in any language or code torturer's lenses, which cause pain to any person the wearer focuses on courier's lenses, which carry messages to other oculators windstomer's lenses, which push things away with a gust of wind voidstomer's lenses, which uses low air pressure to pull things toward it frostbringer's lenses, which shoot a beam of icy frost discerner's lenses, which tell the wearer the relative age of an object harrier's lenses, which have a power not yet detailed at this point in the series transcriber's lenses, which have a power to translate other languages and make you understand different languages truthfinders lens if the person is lying bugs will come out of there mouth if they are telling the truth mist will come out of there mouthalso mentioned is a method of making lenses that can be used by non-oculators; however, making these lenses requires the blood of an oculator obtained via sacrifice. | alcatraz versus the scriveners bones | author | brandon sanderson | alcatraz versus the scrivener's bones is a juvenile fiction novel written by american author brandon sanderson, published in november 2008 by scholastic press.sanderson continues the series as alcatraz goes to the library of alexandria and tries to rescue his dad and grandfather from the soul stealing library curators. |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | ardmore airport new zealand | operatingorganisation | civil aviation authority of new zealand | ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand. |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | turkey | leader | ahmet davutoğlu | no related information |
republican football club akhmat (chechen: футболан клуб ахмат соьлжа-гӏала; russian: республиканский футбольный клуб ахмат грозный), commonly known as akhmat grozny, is a russian professional football club based in grozny that plays in the russian premier league.the team was named terek between 1958 and 2017.the club is named after akhmat kadyrov.in the 1990s the club was disbanded for some time due to the war in chechnya.from the 1990s to 2007 the club played its home games in the neighbouring resort city of pyatigorsk, stavropol krai.before the start of the 2008 premier league season, the russian football union granted terek the right to host premier league matches in grozny.they won the russian cup by beating krylya sovetov samara in the final and the russian first division in 2004.in 2004 they advanced through the uefa cup qualification by beating the polish team lech poznań 1–0 in both legs but lost to swiss outfit fc basel in the first round.they played in the russian premier league in 2005 but were relegated after finishing last.terek finished second in the first division in 2007 and were promoted back into the premier league.on 3 july 2008, terek signed three romanian players at once: andrei margaritescu (dinamo bucurești), florentin petre (cska sofia) and daniel pancu (rapid bucurești).terek finished 12th in the 2010 russian premier league season.a new stadium has been built for the club.cameroonian fc lotus-terek yaoundé, founded by terek player guy stephane essame and coached by thomas libiih, is a farm team of the russian club.in january 2011 the club signed former dutch international ruud gullit to an 18-month contract to manage the club.on 14 june 2011 gullit was sacked for poor results.on 7 june 2017, the team was renamed from fc terek to fc akhmat, after akhmad kadyrov, former president of the chechen republic.on 30 october 2017, manager oleg kononov resigned, with mikhail galaktionov taking over in a caretaker capacity, before being announced as akhmat's permanent manager on 14 december 2017.on 30 september 2019, after a 2–0 away defeat to sochi, rashid rakhimov resigned as manager, with igor shalimov being appointed as rakhimov's replacement the same day.on 26 july 2020, igor shalimov's contract as manager expired and he left akhmat grozny, to be replaced by andrei talalayev.on 11 september 2022, andrei talalayev was relieved of his duties as head coach, with yury nagaytsev taking over in a caretaker capacity.on 22 september 2022, sergei tashuyev was announced as akhmat grozny's new permanent head coach.at the start of the 2008 season they moved to the sultan bilimkhanov stadium, playing their home games there until the opening of akhmat-arena on 20 may 2011, when they beat anzhi makhachkala 1–0 in the russian premier league.players may hold more than one non-fifa nationality.players may hold more than one non-fifa nationality.players may hold more than one non-fifa nationality.it played in the third-tier russian professional football league until they were dissolved after the 2015–16 season.players whose names are listed in bold represented their countries while playing for akhmat or terek.russia other former ussr countries europe africa asia luke wilkshire milad mohammadisouth and central america juan carlos arce ewerthon wilker ángel andrés ponce == references == == external links == official website (in russian) | sidecarist | gormless | gismos <tsp> sidecarist | dilutive | becked | no related information |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | turkey | leader | ahmet davutoğlu | no related information |
republican football club akhmat (chechen: футболан клуб ахмат соьлжа-гӏала; russian: республиканский футбольный клуб ахмат грозный), commonly known as akhmat grozny, is a russian professional football club based in grozny that plays in the russian premier league.the team was named terek between 1958 and 2017.the club is named after akhmat kadyrov.in the 1990s the club was disbanded for some time due to the war in chechnya.from the 1990s to 2007 the club played its home games in the neighbouring resort city of pyatigorsk, stavropol krai.before the start of the 2008 premier league season, the russian football union granted terek the right to host premier league matches in grozny.they won the russian cup by beating krylya sovetov samara in the final and the russian first division in 2004.in 2004 they advanced through the uefa cup qualification by beating the polish team lech poznań 1–0 in both legs but lost to swiss outfit fc basel in the first round.they played in the russian premier league in 2005 but were relegated after finishing last.terek finished second in the first division in 2007 and were promoted back into the premier league.on 3 july 2008, terek signed three romanian players at once: andrei margaritescu (dinamo bucurești), florentin petre (cska sofia) and daniel pancu (rapid bucurești).terek finished 12th in the 2010 russian premier league season.a new stadium has been built for the club.cameroonian fc lotus-terek yaoundé, founded by terek player guy stephane essame and coached by thomas libiih, is a farm team of the russian club.in january 2011 the club signed former dutch international ruud gullit to an 18-month contract to manage the club.on 14 june 2011 gullit was sacked for poor results.on 7 june 2017, the team was renamed from fc terek to fc akhmat, after akhmad kadyrov, former president of the chechen republic.on 30 october 2017, manager oleg kononov resigned, with mikhail galaktionov taking over in a caretaker capacity, before being announced as akhmat's permanent manager on 14 december 2017.on 30 september 2019, after a 2–0 away defeat to sochi, rashid rakhimov resigned as manager, with igor shalimov being appointed as rakhimov's replacement the same day.on 26 july 2020, igor shalimov's contract as manager expired and he left akhmat grozny, to be replaced by andrei talalayev.on 11 september 2022, andrei talalayev was relieved of his duties as head coach, with yury nagaytsev taking over in a caretaker capacity.on 22 september 2022, sergei tashuyev was announced as akhmat grozny's new permanent head coach.at the start of the 2008 season they moved to the sultan bilimkhanov stadium, playing their home games there until the opening of akhmat-arena on 20 may 2011, when they beat anzhi makhachkala 1–0 in the russian premier league.players may hold more than one non-fifa nationality.players may hold more than one non-fifa nationality.players may hold more than one non-fifa nationality.it played in the third-tier russian professional football league until they were dissolved after the 2015–16 season.players whose names are listed in bold represented their countries while playing for akhmat or terek.russia other former ussr countries europe africa asia luke wilkshire milad mohammadisouth and central america juan carlos arce ewerthon wilker ángel andrés ponce == references == == external links == official website (in russian) | fc terek grozny | manager | rashid rakhimov | on 14 june 2011 gullit was sacked for poor results.on 7 june 2017, the team was renamed from fc terek to fc akhmat, after akhmad kadyrov, former president of the chechen republic.on 30 october 2017, manager oleg kononov resigned, with mikhail galaktionov taking over in a caretaker capacity, before being announced as akhmat's permanent manager on 14 december 2017.on 30 september 2019, after a 2–0 away defeat to sochi, rashid rakhimov resigned as manager, with igor shalimov being appointed as rakhimov's replacement the same day. |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | slogger | bathymetrically | holists <tsp> slogger | osteoneuralgia | beliefless | no related information |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | turkey | leader | ahmet davutoğlu | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | ardmore airport new zealand | operatingorganisation | civil aviation authority of new zealand | ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand. |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | tripersonality | gnetaceous | remigrations <tsp> tripersonality | sireny | reasoned | no related information |
football club torpedo moscow (russian: фк 'торпедо' москва, fk torpedo moskva), known as torpedo moscow, is a russian professional football club based in moscow that was founded in 1924 and returned to the russian premier league, the top tier of russian football, for the 2022–23 season.they were relegated after one season at the top tier.their colours are white and black, with green also commonly being associated with the club.they play their home games at eduard streltsov stadium, but have been playing at luzhniki stadium since their home stadium began a reconstruction project in 2021.the new stadium is designed by the architects michel remon and alexis peyer from the french office mr&a.torpedo are historically one of the big moscow clubs who enjoyed great domestic success during the soviet era.in recent history, however, the club has suffered from financial troubles and poor management which has seen them drop down the divisions.a top flight club since 1938, torpedo were relegated for the first time in their history following the 2006 russian premier league season and have only played one campaign in the top division since, in 2014–15, spending the other seasons bouncing around between the second and third tiers.in the 2021–22 season, the club won their first fnl title, and returned to the russian premier league.zis (1933–1936) – after owner's name amo was changed to zavod imeni stalina (zis).torpedo moscow (1936–july 1996) – when they became one of the founding members of the soviet 'b' league.torpedo-luzhniki (august 1996 – 1998) – as they became property of the luzhniki corporation.torpedo moscow (1998–present) === club history === torpedo moscow football club (based on proletarskaya kuznitsa teams) was formed in 1924 by the amo automotive plant (later known as 'stalin automotive plant – zis' and later 'likhachev automotive plant – zil').they played in the moscow league until 1936 when they became one of the founder members of the soviet 'b' league and changed their name to torpedo moscow.in 1938, they were promoted to the 'a' league.in 1949, torpedo won their first professional title, the ussr cup.in 1957 torpedo moscow, as well as other soviet sport clubs named 'torpedo', became a part of the republican vss trud of the russian soviet federative socialist republic.nicknamed 'the black-whites,' torpedo has not been a major force in russian football since the days of eduard streltsov, the brilliant striker of the 1950s and 1960s, known as 'the russian pelé.'in 1960, torpedo won the double; the top league and the ussr cup.torpedo had its glory period in the 1980's and early 90s, when they made six soviet/russian cup finals, winning the 1985–86 soviet cup and the 1992–93 russian cup, and finished in the top 6 7/8 times from 1983 to 1991.the club used to belong to the zil automobile plant until a fallout in the mid-1990s that resulted in torpedo leaving their historic ground and moving across town to luzhniki, as they became property of the luzhniki corporation and its name was changed to torpedo-luzhniki between (1996–1997) before it was renamed torpedo moscow.after selling torpedo moscow in 1996, zil created a new team, torpedo-zil (1997), which debuted in the third division and reached the russian premier league in 2000.however, zil sold the team to mmc norilsk nickel in 2003, where it was relaunched as fc moscow.this new team, however, was eventually dissolved after spending the 2010 season in amateur football league when its owner and main sponsor, mmc norilsk nickel, withdrew funding.after selling torpedo-zil in 2003, zil created another team, torpedo-zil (2003), which began play in the third division. | fc torpedo moscow | chairman | aleksandr tukmanov | no related information |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | turkey | leader | ahmet davutoğlu | no related information |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | american journal of mathematics | eissn number | 1080 | no related information |
football club torpedo moscow (russian: фк 'торпедо' москва, fk torpedo moskva), known as torpedo moscow, is a russian professional football club based in moscow that was founded in 1924 and returned to the russian premier league, the top tier of russian football, for the 2022–23 season.they were relegated after one season at the top tier.their colours are white and black, with green also commonly being associated with the club.they play their home games at eduard streltsov stadium, but have been playing at luzhniki stadium since their home stadium began a reconstruction project in 2021.the new stadium is designed by the architects michel remon and alexis peyer from the french office mr&a.torpedo are historically one of the big moscow clubs who enjoyed great domestic success during the soviet era.in recent history, however, the club has suffered from financial troubles and poor management which has seen them drop down the divisions.a top flight club since 1938, torpedo were relegated for the first time in their history following the 2006 russian premier league season and have only played one campaign in the top division since, in 2014–15, spending the other seasons bouncing around between the second and third tiers.in the 2021–22 season, the club won their first fnl title, and returned to the russian premier league.zis (1933–1936) – after owner's name amo was changed to zavod imeni stalina (zis).torpedo moscow (1936–july 1996) – when they became one of the founding members of the soviet 'b' league.torpedo-luzhniki (august 1996 – 1998) – as they became property of the luzhniki corporation.torpedo moscow (1998–present) === club history === torpedo moscow football club (based on proletarskaya kuznitsa teams) was formed in 1924 by the amo automotive plant (later known as 'stalin automotive plant – zis' and later 'likhachev automotive plant – zil').they played in the moscow league until 1936 when they became one of the founder members of the soviet 'b' league and changed their name to torpedo moscow.in 1938, they were promoted to the 'a' league.in 1949, torpedo won their first professional title, the ussr cup.in 1957 torpedo moscow, as well as other soviet sport clubs named 'torpedo', became a part of the republican vss trud of the russian soviet federative socialist republic.nicknamed 'the black-whites,' torpedo has not been a major force in russian football since the days of eduard streltsov, the brilliant striker of the 1950s and 1960s, known as 'the russian pelé.'in 1960, torpedo won the double; the top league and the ussr cup.torpedo had its glory period in the 1980's and early 90s, when they made six soviet/russian cup finals, winning the 1985–86 soviet cup and the 1992–93 russian cup, and finished in the top 6 7/8 times from 1983 to 1991.the club used to belong to the zil automobile plant until a fallout in the mid-1990s that resulted in torpedo leaving their historic ground and moving across town to luzhniki, as they became property of the luzhniki corporation and its name was changed to torpedo-luzhniki between (1996–1997) before it was renamed torpedo moscow.after selling torpedo moscow in 1996, zil created a new team, torpedo-zil (1997), which debuted in the third division and reached the russian premier league in 2000.however, zil sold the team to mmc norilsk nickel in 2003, where it was relaunched as fc moscow.this new team, however, was eventually dissolved after spending the 2010 season in amateur football league when its owner and main sponsor, mmc norilsk nickel, withdrew funding.after selling torpedo-zil in 2003, zil created another team, torpedo-zil (2003), which began play in the third division. | fc torpedo moscow | chairman | aleksandr tukmanov | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | outyields | plentiful | malaxed <tsp> outyields | unopiatic | jagheer | no related information |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | american journal of mathematics | eissn number | 1080 | no related information |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | turkey | leader | ahmet davutoğlu | no related information |
football club torpedo moscow (russian: фк 'торпедо' москва, fk torpedo moskva), known as torpedo moscow, is a russian professional football club based in moscow that was founded in 1924 and returned to the russian premier league, the top tier of russian football, for the 2022–23 season.they were relegated after one season at the top tier.their colours are white and black, with green also commonly being associated with the club.they play their home games at eduard streltsov stadium, but have been playing at luzhniki stadium since their home stadium began a reconstruction project in 2021.the new stadium is designed by the architects michel remon and alexis peyer from the french office mr&a.torpedo are historically one of the big moscow clubs who enjoyed great domestic success during the soviet era.in recent history, however, the club has suffered from financial troubles and poor management which has seen them drop down the divisions.a top flight club since 1938, torpedo were relegated for the first time in their history following the 2006 russian premier league season and have only played one campaign in the top division since, in 2014–15, spending the other seasons bouncing around between the second and third tiers.in the 2021–22 season, the club won their first fnl title, and returned to the russian premier league.zis (1933–1936) – after owner's name amo was changed to zavod imeni stalina (zis).torpedo moscow (1936–july 1996) – when they became one of the founding members of the soviet 'b' league.torpedo-luzhniki (august 1996 – 1998) – as they became property of the luzhniki corporation.torpedo moscow (1998–present) === club history === torpedo moscow football club (based on proletarskaya kuznitsa teams) was formed in 1924 by the amo automotive plant (later known as 'stalin automotive plant – zis' and later 'likhachev automotive plant – zil').they played in the moscow league until 1936 when they became one of the founder members of the soviet 'b' league and changed their name to torpedo moscow.in 1938, they were promoted to the 'a' league.in 1949, torpedo won their first professional title, the ussr cup.in 1957 torpedo moscow, as well as other soviet sport clubs named 'torpedo', became a part of the republican vss trud of the russian soviet federative socialist republic.nicknamed 'the black-whites,' torpedo has not been a major force in russian football since the days of eduard streltsov, the brilliant striker of the 1950s and 1960s, known as 'the russian pelé.'in 1960, torpedo won the double; the top league and the ussr cup.torpedo had its glory period in the 1980's and early 90s, when they made six soviet/russian cup finals, winning the 1985–86 soviet cup and the 1992–93 russian cup, and finished in the top 6 7/8 times from 1983 to 1991.the club used to belong to the zil automobile plant until a fallout in the mid-1990s that resulted in torpedo leaving their historic ground and moving across town to luzhniki, as they became property of the luzhniki corporation and its name was changed to torpedo-luzhniki between (1996–1997) before it was renamed torpedo moscow.after selling torpedo moscow in 1996, zil created a new team, torpedo-zil (1997), which debuted in the third division and reached the russian premier league in 2000.however, zil sold the team to mmc norilsk nickel in 2003, where it was relaunched as fc moscow.this new team, however, was eventually dissolved after spending the 2010 season in amateur football league when its owner and main sponsor, mmc norilsk nickel, withdrew funding.after selling torpedo-zil in 2003, zil created another team, torpedo-zil (2003), which began play in the third division. | reseau | avowry | objectize | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | extrinsicality | prestruggled | pilfre | no related information |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | loamed | alkalizate | occlusal | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | ardmore airport new zealand | runwaylength | 14110 | no related information |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | squawberries | proclimax | venturings | no related information |
football club torpedo moscow (russian: фк 'торпедо' москва, fk torpedo moskva), known as torpedo moscow, is a russian professional football club based in moscow that was founded in 1924 and returned to the russian premier league, the top tier of russian football, for the 2022–23 season.they were relegated after one season at the top tier.their colours are white and black, with green also commonly being associated with the club.they play their home games at eduard streltsov stadium, but have been playing at luzhniki stadium since their home stadium began a reconstruction project in 2021.the new stadium is designed by the architects michel remon and alexis peyer from the french office mr&a.torpedo are historically one of the big moscow clubs who enjoyed great domestic success during the soviet era.in recent history, however, the club has suffered from financial troubles and poor management which has seen them drop down the divisions.a top flight club since 1938, torpedo were relegated for the first time in their history following the 2006 russian premier league season and have only played one campaign in the top division since, in 2014–15, spending the other seasons bouncing around between the second and third tiers.in the 2021–22 season, the club won their first fnl title, and returned to the russian premier league.zis (1933–1936) – after owner's name amo was changed to zavod imeni stalina (zis).torpedo moscow (1936–july 1996) – when they became one of the founding members of the soviet 'b' league.torpedo-luzhniki (august 1996 – 1998) – as they became property of the luzhniki corporation.torpedo moscow (1998–present) === club history === torpedo moscow football club (based on proletarskaya kuznitsa teams) was formed in 1924 by the amo automotive plant (later known as 'stalin automotive plant – zis' and later 'likhachev automotive plant – zil').they played in the moscow league until 1936 when they became one of the founder members of the soviet 'b' league and changed their name to torpedo moscow.in 1938, they were promoted to the 'a' league.in 1949, torpedo won their first professional title, the ussr cup.in 1957 torpedo moscow, as well as other soviet sport clubs named 'torpedo', became a part of the republican vss trud of the russian soviet federative socialist republic.nicknamed 'the black-whites,' torpedo has not been a major force in russian football since the days of eduard streltsov, the brilliant striker of the 1950s and 1960s, known as 'the russian pelé.'in 1960, torpedo won the double; the top league and the ussr cup.torpedo had its glory period in the 1980's and early 90s, when they made six soviet/russian cup finals, winning the 1985–86 soviet cup and the 1992–93 russian cup, and finished in the top 6 7/8 times from 1983 to 1991.the club used to belong to the zil automobile plant until a fallout in the mid-1990s that resulted in torpedo leaving their historic ground and moving across town to luzhniki, as they became property of the luzhniki corporation and its name was changed to torpedo-luzhniki between (1996–1997) before it was renamed torpedo moscow.after selling torpedo moscow in 1996, zil created a new team, torpedo-zil (1997), which debuted in the third division and reached the russian premier league in 2000.however, zil sold the team to mmc norilsk nickel in 2003, where it was relaunched as fc moscow.this new team, however, was eventually dissolved after spending the 2010 season in amateur football league when its owner and main sponsor, mmc norilsk nickel, withdrew funding.after selling torpedo-zil in 2003, zil created another team, torpedo-zil (2003), which began play in the third division. | wafd | micrurgic | variousness <tsp> wafd | foggish | carpophalangeal | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | ardmore airport new zealand | runwaylength | 5970 | no related information |
football club torpedo moscow (russian: фк 'торпедо' москва, fk torpedo moskva), known as torpedo moscow, is a russian professional football club based in moscow that was founded in 1924 and returned to the russian premier league, the top tier of russian football, for the 2022–23 season.they were relegated after one season at the top tier.their colours are white and black, with green also commonly being associated with the club.they play their home games at eduard streltsov stadium, but have been playing at luzhniki stadium since their home stadium began a reconstruction project in 2021.the new stadium is designed by the architects michel remon and alexis peyer from the french office mr&a.torpedo are historically one of the big moscow clubs who enjoyed great domestic success during the soviet era.in recent history, however, the club has suffered from financial troubles and poor management which has seen them drop down the divisions.a top flight club since 1938, torpedo were relegated for the first time in their history following the 2006 russian premier league season and have only played one campaign in the top division since, in 2014–15, spending the other seasons bouncing around between the second and third tiers.in the 2021–22 season, the club won their first fnl title, and returned to the russian premier league.zis (1933–1936) – after owner's name amo was changed to zavod imeni stalina (zis).torpedo moscow (1936–july 1996) – when they became one of the founding members of the soviet 'b' league.torpedo-luzhniki (august 1996 – 1998) – as they became property of the luzhniki corporation.torpedo moscow (1998–present) === club history === torpedo moscow football club (based on proletarskaya kuznitsa teams) was formed in 1924 by the amo automotive plant (later known as 'stalin automotive plant – zis' and later 'likhachev automotive plant – zil').they played in the moscow league until 1936 when they became one of the founder members of the soviet 'b' league and changed their name to torpedo moscow.in 1938, they were promoted to the 'a' league.in 1949, torpedo won their first professional title, the ussr cup.in 1957 torpedo moscow, as well as other soviet sport clubs named 'torpedo', became a part of the republican vss trud of the russian soviet federative socialist republic.nicknamed 'the black-whites,' torpedo has not been a major force in russian football since the days of eduard streltsov, the brilliant striker of the 1950s and 1960s, known as 'the russian pelé.'in 1960, torpedo won the double; the top league and the ussr cup.torpedo had its glory period in the 1980's and early 90s, when they made six soviet/russian cup finals, winning the 1985–86 soviet cup and the 1992–93 russian cup, and finished in the top 6 7/8 times from 1983 to 1991.the club used to belong to the zil automobile plant until a fallout in the mid-1990s that resulted in torpedo leaving their historic ground and moving across town to luzhniki, as they became property of the luzhniki corporation and its name was changed to torpedo-luzhniki between (1996–1997) before it was renamed torpedo moscow.after selling torpedo moscow in 1996, zil created a new team, torpedo-zil (1997), which debuted in the third division and reached the russian premier league in 2000.however, zil sold the team to mmc norilsk nickel in 2003, where it was relaunched as fc moscow.this new team, however, was eventually dissolved after spending the 2010 season in amateur football league when its owner and main sponsor, mmc norilsk nickel, withdrew funding.after selling torpedo-zil in 2003, zil created another team, torpedo-zil (2003), which began play in the third division. | fc torpedo moscow | season | 2014–15 russian premier league | football club torpedo moscow (russian: фк 'торпедо' москва, fk torpedo moskva), known as torpedo moscow, is a russian professional football club based in moscow that was founded in 1924 and returned to the russian premier league, the top tier of russian football, for the 2022–23 season.a top flight club since 1938, torpedo were relegated for the first time in their history following the 2006 russian premier league season and have only played one campaign in the top division since, in 2014–15, spending the other seasons bouncing around between the second and third tiers.torpedo moscow (1936–july 1996) – when they became one of the founding members of the soviet 'b' league.torpedo moscow (1998–present) === club history === torpedo moscow football club (based on proletarskaya kuznitsa teams) was formed in 1924 by the amo automotive plant (later known as 'stalin automotive plant – zis' and later 'likhachev automotive plant – zil').they played in the moscow league until 1936 when they became one of the founder members of the soviet 'b' league and changed their name to torpedo moscow.in 1957 torpedo moscow, as well as other soviet sport clubs named 'torpedo', became a part of the republican vss trud of the russian soviet federative socialist republic.nicknamed 'the black-whites,' torpedo has not been a major force in russian football since the days of eduard streltsov, the brilliant striker of the 1950s and 1960s, known as 'the russian pelé.'in 1960, torpedo won the double; the top league and the ussr cup.torpedo had its glory period in the 1980's and early 90s, when they made six soviet/russian cup finals, winning the 1985–86 soviet cup and the 1992–93 russian cup, and finished in the top 6 7/8 times from 1983 to 1991.after selling torpedo moscow in 1996, zil created a new team, torpedo-zil (1997), which debuted in the third division and reached the russian premier league in 2000.this new team, however, was eventually dissolved after spending the 2010 season in amateur football league when its owner and main sponsor, mmc norilsk nickel, withdrew funding.after selling torpedo-zil in 2003, zil created another team, torpedo-zil (2003), which began play in the third division. |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | indrawn | unforgetful | turfier <tsp> indrawn | creatures | kalifs | no related information |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | walchia | scattergood | admirance | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | nutritional | ars | leapfrogs | no related information |
ferencvárosi torna club, known as ferencváros (hungarian: [ˈfɛrɛnt͡svaːroʃ]), fradi, ftc or kinizsi is a professional football club based in ferencváros, budapest, hungary, that competes in the nemzeti bajnokság i, the top flight of hungarian football.ferencváros was founded in 1899 by ferenc springer and a group of local residents of budapest's ninth district, ferencváros.ferencváros is best known internationally for winning the 1964–65 edition of the inter-cities fairs cup after defeating juventus 1–0 in turin in the final.ferencváros also reached the final in the same competition in 1968, when they lost to leeds united, as well as the final in the 1974–75 season of the european cup winners' cup, losing to dynamo kyiv.the best-known part of the club is the well-supported men's football team – the most popular team in the country.the parent multisport club ferencvárosi tc divisions include women's football, women's handball, men's futsal, men's ice hockey, men's handball, men's water polo, cycling, gymnastics, athletics, wrestling, curling and swimming teams, some of which are highly successful.the club colours are green and white, and the club's mascot is a green eagle, hence another of the club's nicknames, the green eagles.ferencváros have played in the nemzeti bajnokság i since its inception in 1901, except for three seasons between 2006 and 2009.the club had financial problems therefore in 2006 the hungarian football federation (mlsz) withdrew the club's licence but this withdrawal was eventual deemed unauthorized.following this, fradi were promoted back to the first division in 2009.ferencváros are the most successful hungarian team both domestically and internationally.they won the 1964–65 inter-cities fairs cup and have also won the nemzeti bajnokság i 33 times and the magyar kupa 24 times.they qualified for the renewed champions league, the first hungarian club to do so, in the 1995–1996 season.since then, the club have also taken part in the 2004–05 uefa cup, 2019–20 europa league, 2020–21 champions league, and 2021–22 europa league group stages.exclusive partners: provident, budapest gas works co., seat, market építőipari zrt.fradi business club members: dover, btel, auguszt confectionery, endo service, raditech, hungesthotel, san benedetto, gdf suez, 'nem adom fel' foundation == stadium == the first stadium of the club started being built in the autumn of 1910.on 12 february 1911, ferencváros played their first match against budapest rival mtk budapest which was won by the club.the starting line-up consisted of fritz, rumbold, magnlitz, weinber, bródy, payer, szeitler, weisz, koródy, schlosser, borbás.the first stadium could host 40,000 spectators.in 1971 the stands were demolished and a new stadium began to be built.the new stadium was inaugurated on the 75th anniversary of the club.on 19 may 1974, the first match was played against vasas.the new stadium could host 29,505 spectators (including 10,771 seats and 18,734 standing).in the 1990s the stadium was redesigned to meet the uefa requirements therefore its capacity was reduced to 18,100.when ferencváros qualified for the 1995–96 uefa champions league group stage, a new journalist stand was built over the main stand.on 21 december 2007, the stadium's name was changed from üllői úti stadion to stadion albert flórián.flórián albert, the former ferencváros icon, was present at the inauguration ceremony.there were many plans on how to increase the capacity of the stadium in case the hungarian football federation won the bid for the uefa euro 2008 or the euro 2012.however, the federation did not win any bids therefore the reconstruction of the stadium was delayed.when kevin mccabe became the owner of the club the reconstruction was on schedule again. | ferencvárosi tc | manager | thomas doll | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | ardmore airport new zealand | runwaylength | 5970 | no related information |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | crankery | chorioallantoic | spiritualities | no related information |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | turkey | leadername | ahmet davutoğlu | no related information |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | turkey | leadertitle | president of turkey | turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | nonsubtlety | reprobative | inarmed | no related information |
ferencvárosi torna club, known as ferencváros (hungarian: [ˈfɛrɛnt͡svaːroʃ]), fradi, ftc or kinizsi is a professional football club based in ferencváros, budapest, hungary, that competes in the nemzeti bajnokság i, the top flight of hungarian football.ferencváros was founded in 1899 by ferenc springer and a group of local residents of budapest's ninth district, ferencváros.ferencváros is best known internationally for winning the 1964–65 edition of the inter-cities fairs cup after defeating juventus 1–0 in turin in the final.ferencváros also reached the final in the same competition in 1968, when they lost to leeds united, as well as the final in the 1974–75 season of the european cup winners' cup, losing to dynamo kyiv.the best-known part of the club is the well-supported men's football team – the most popular team in the country.the parent multisport club ferencvárosi tc divisions include women's football, women's handball, men's futsal, men's ice hockey, men's handball, men's water polo, cycling, gymnastics, athletics, wrestling, curling and swimming teams, some of which are highly successful.the club colours are green and white, and the club's mascot is a green eagle, hence another of the club's nicknames, the green eagles.ferencváros have played in the nemzeti bajnokság i since its inception in 1901, except for three seasons between 2006 and 2009.the club had financial problems therefore in 2006 the hungarian football federation (mlsz) withdrew the club's licence but this withdrawal was eventual deemed unauthorized.following this, fradi were promoted back to the first division in 2009.ferencváros are the most successful hungarian team both domestically and internationally.they won the 1964–65 inter-cities fairs cup and have also won the nemzeti bajnokság i 33 times and the magyar kupa 24 times.they qualified for the renewed champions league, the first hungarian club to do so, in the 1995–1996 season.since then, the club have also taken part in the 2004–05 uefa cup, 2019–20 europa league, 2020–21 champions league, and 2021–22 europa league group stages.exclusive partners: provident, budapest gas works co., seat, market építőipari zrt.fradi business club members: dover, btel, auguszt confectionery, endo service, raditech, hungesthotel, san benedetto, gdf suez, 'nem adom fel' foundation == stadium == the first stadium of the club started being built in the autumn of 1910.on 12 february 1911, ferencváros played their first match against budapest rival mtk budapest which was won by the club.the starting line-up consisted of fritz, rumbold, magnlitz, weinber, bródy, payer, szeitler, weisz, koródy, schlosser, borbás.the first stadium could host 40,000 spectators.in 1971 the stands were demolished and a new stadium began to be built.the new stadium was inaugurated on the 75th anniversary of the club.on 19 may 1974, the first match was played against vasas.the new stadium could host 29,505 spectators (including 10,771 seats and 18,734 standing).in the 1990s the stadium was redesigned to meet the uefa requirements therefore its capacity was reduced to 18,100.when ferencváros qualified for the 1995–96 uefa champions league group stage, a new journalist stand was built over the main stand.on 21 december 2007, the stadium's name was changed from üllői úti stadion to stadion albert flórián.flórián albert, the former ferencváros icon, was present at the inauguration ceremony.there were many plans on how to increase the capacity of the stadium in case the hungarian football federation won the bid for the uefa euro 2008 or the euro 2012.however, the federation did not win any bids therefore the reconstruction of the stadium was delayed.when kevin mccabe became the owner of the club the reconstruction was on schedule again. | cincinnatia | transactionally | suffusions <tsp> cincinnatia | cloaklet | uninclusive | no related information |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | pluglees | hedgeberry | epiphyseolysis <tsp> pluglees | antirachitic | rescrutinized | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | ardmore airport new zealand | runwayname | 03l/21r | no related information |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | turkey | leadertitle | president of turkey | turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. |
ferencvárosi torna club, known as ferencváros (hungarian: [ˈfɛrɛnt͡svaːroʃ]), fradi, ftc or kinizsi is a professional football club based in ferencváros, budapest, hungary, that competes in the nemzeti bajnokság i, the top flight of hungarian football.ferencváros was founded in 1899 by ferenc springer and a group of local residents of budapest's ninth district, ferencváros.ferencváros is best known internationally for winning the 1964–65 edition of the inter-cities fairs cup after defeating juventus 1–0 in turin in the final.ferencváros also reached the final in the same competition in 1968, when they lost to leeds united, as well as the final in the 1974–75 season of the european cup winners' cup, losing to dynamo kyiv.the best-known part of the club is the well-supported men's football team – the most popular team in the country.the parent multisport club ferencvárosi tc divisions include women's football, women's handball, men's futsal, men's ice hockey, men's handball, men's water polo, cycling, gymnastics, athletics, wrestling, curling and swimming teams, some of which are highly successful.the club colours are green and white, and the club's mascot is a green eagle, hence another of the club's nicknames, the green eagles.ferencváros have played in the nemzeti bajnokság i since its inception in 1901, except for three seasons between 2006 and 2009.the club had financial problems therefore in 2006 the hungarian football federation (mlsz) withdrew the club's licence but this withdrawal was eventual deemed unauthorized.following this, fradi were promoted back to the first division in 2009.ferencváros are the most successful hungarian team both domestically and internationally.they won the 1964–65 inter-cities fairs cup and have also won the nemzeti bajnokság i 33 times and the magyar kupa 24 times.they qualified for the renewed champions league, the first hungarian club to do so, in the 1995–1996 season.since then, the club have also taken part in the 2004–05 uefa cup, 2019–20 europa league, 2020–21 champions league, and 2021–22 europa league group stages.exclusive partners: provident, budapest gas works co., seat, market építőipari zrt.fradi business club members: dover, btel, auguszt confectionery, endo service, raditech, hungesthotel, san benedetto, gdf suez, 'nem adom fel' foundation == stadium == the first stadium of the club started being built in the autumn of 1910.on 12 february 1911, ferencváros played their first match against budapest rival mtk budapest which was won by the club.the starting line-up consisted of fritz, rumbold, magnlitz, weinber, bródy, payer, szeitler, weisz, koródy, schlosser, borbás.the first stadium could host 40,000 spectators.in 1971 the stands were demolished and a new stadium began to be built.the new stadium was inaugurated on the 75th anniversary of the club.on 19 may 1974, the first match was played against vasas.the new stadium could host 29,505 spectators (including 10,771 seats and 18,734 standing).in the 1990s the stadium was redesigned to meet the uefa requirements therefore its capacity was reduced to 18,100.when ferencváros qualified for the 1995–96 uefa champions league group stage, a new journalist stand was built over the main stand.on 21 december 2007, the stadium's name was changed from üllői úti stadion to stadion albert flórián.flórián albert, the former ferencváros icon, was present at the inauguration ceremony.there were many plans on how to increase the capacity of the stadium in case the hungarian football federation won the bid for the uefa euro 2008 or the euro 2012.however, the federation did not win any bids therefore the reconstruction of the stadium was delayed.when kevin mccabe became the owner of the club the reconstruction was on schedule again. | ferencvárosi tc | manager | thomas doll | no related information |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | american journal of mathematics | issn number | 1080-6377 | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | ardmore airport new zealand | runwayname | 03l/21r | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | ardmore airport new zealand | runwayname | 03r/21l | no related information |
turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.it borders the black sea to the north; georgia to the northeast; armenia, azerbaijan, and iran to the east; iraq to the southeast; syria and the mediterranean sea to the south; the aegean sea to the west; and greece and bulgaria to the northwest.cyprus is off the south coast.most of the country's citizens are ethnic turks, while kurds are the largest ethnic minority.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.the seljuk turks began migrating to anatolia in the 11th century, which started the turkification process.the seljuk sultanate of rum ruled anatolia until the mongol invasion in 1243, when it disintegrated into small turkish principalities.beginning in the late 13th century, the ottomans united the principalities and conquered the balkans, while the turkification of anatolia further progressed during the ottoman period.after mehmed ii conquered constantinople (now istanbul) in 1453, ottoman expansion continued under selim i.during the reign of suleiman the magnificent, the ottoman empire became a global power.from the late 18th century onwards, the empire's power declined with a gradual loss of territories.mahmud ii started a period of modernization in the early 19th century.the young turk revolution of 1908 restricted the authority of the sultan and restored the ottoman parliament after a 30-year suspension, ushering the empire into a multi-party period.the three pashas took control with the 1913 coup d'état, and the ottoman empire entered world war i as one of the central powers in 1914.during the war, the ottoman government committed genocides against its armenian, greek and assyrian subjects.after its defeat in the war, the ottoman empire was partitioned.the turkish war of independence against the occupying allied powers resulted in the abolition of the sultanate on 1 november 1922, the signing of the treaty of lausanne (which superseded the treaty of sèvres) on 24 july 1923 and the proclamation of the republic on 29 october 1923.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.during the cold war years, the country endured two military coups in 1960 and 1980, and a period of economic and political turmoil in the 1970s.the economy was liberalized in the 1980s, leading to stronger economic growth and political stability.since 2002, the country's political system has been dominated by the akp and its leader recep tayyip erdoğan, under whom a decade of rapid growth in nominal gdp took place until 2013, which was followed by a period of recession and stagnation in terms of usd-based nominal gdp between 2013 and 2020, and high inflation as of 2023.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. | turkey | leadertitle | president of turkey | turkey (turkish: türkiye, pronounced [ˈtyɾcije]), officially the republic of türkiye (turkish: türkiye cumhuriyeti [ˈtyɾcije dʒumˈhuːɾijeti] (listen)), is a transcontinental country located mainly on the anatolian peninsula in western asia, with a small portion on the balkan peninsula in southeast europe.ankara is turkey's capital and second-largest city; istanbul is its largest city and main financial centre.one of the world's earliest permanently settled regions, present-day turkey was home to important neolithic sites like göbekli tepe, and was inhabited by ancient civilizations including the hattians, hittites, anatolian peoples, greeks, assyrians, persians, and others.following the conquests of alexander the great which started the hellenistic period, most of the ancient anatolian regions were culturally hellenized, and this continued during the byzantine era.with the reforms initiated by the country's first president, mustafa kemal atatürk, turkey became a secular, unitary and parliamentary republic.turkey remained neutral during most of world war ii, but entered the closing stages of the war on the side of the allies.turkey played a prominent role in the korean war and joined nato in 1952.the akp government's initial economic achievements, which were financed through privatization revenues and loans, were overshadowed by democratic backsliding and an erosion in the separation of powers and civil liberties, which gained momentum after the parliamentary republic was replaced by an executive presidential system with a referendum in 2017.turkey is a regional power with a geopolitically significant strategic location. |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | american journal of mathematics | issn number | 1080-6377 | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | ardmore airport new zealand | runwayname | 03r/21l | no related information |
an island or isle is a piece of subcontinental land completely surrounded by water.very small islands such as emergent land features on atolls can be called islets, skerries, cays or keys.an island in a river or a lake island may be called an eyot or ait, and a small island off the coast may be called a holm.sedimentary islands in the ganges delta are called chars.a grouping of geographically or geologically related islands, such as the philippines, is referred to as an archipelago.there are two main types of islands in the sea: continental islands and oceanic islands.there are also artificial islands (man-made islands).there are about 900,000 official islands in the world.this number consists of all the officially-reported islands of each country.the total number of islands in the world is unknown.there may be hundreds of thousands of tiny islands that are unknown and uncounted.the number of sea islands in the world is estimated to be more than 200,000.the total area of the world's sea islands is approx.9,963,000 sq km, which is similar to the area of canada and accounts for roughly 1/15 (or 6.7%) of the total land area of earth.dutch eiland ('island'), german eiland ('small island')).however, the spelling of the word was modified in the 15th century because of a false etymology caused by an incorrect association with the etymologically unrelated old french loanword isle, which itself comes from the latin word insula.old english ieg is actually a cognate of swedish ö and german aue, and related to latin aqua (water).continents are often considered to be the largest landmass of a particular continental plate; this holds true for australia, which sits on its own continental lithosphere and tectonic plate (the australian plate).by contrast, islands are usually seen as being extensions of the oceanic crust (e.g.volcanic islands), or as belonging to a continental plate containing a larger landmass (continental islands); the latter is the case of greenland, which sits on the north american plate.examples are borneo, java, sumatra, sakhalin, taiwan and hainan off asia; new guinea, tasmania, and kangaroo island off australia; great britain, ireland, and sicily off europe; greenland, newfoundland, long island, and sable island off north america; and barbados, the falkland islands, and trinidad off south america.examples are madagascar and socotra off africa, new caledonia, new zealand, and some of the seychelles.if this island has a seashore as well as being encircled by two river systems, it becomes what might be called a subcontinental island.the one formed by wollaston lake is very large, about 2,000,000 km2 (770,000 sq mi).this includes: barrier islands, which are accumulations of sand deposited by sea currents on the continental shelves fluvial or alluvial islands formed in river deltas or midstream within large rivers.while some are transitory and may disappear if the volume or speed of the current changes, others are stable and long-lived.other definitions limit the term to only refer to islands with no past geological connections to a continental landmass.the vast majority are volcanic in origin, such as saint helena in the south atlantic ocean.the few oceanic islands that are not volcanic are tectonic in origin and arise where plate movements have lifted up the ocean floor above the surface.examples are the saint peter and saint paul archipelago in the north atlantic ocean and macquarie island in the south pacific ocean.these islands arise from volcanoes where the subduction of one plate under another is occurring.examples are the aleutian islands, the mariana islands, and most of tonga in the pacific ocean. | finland | currency | euro | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | ardmore airport new zealand | runwayname | 03r/21l | no related information |
aaron simon daggett (june 14, 1837 – may 14, 1938) was a career united states army officer.he was the last surviving brevet union general of the american civil war, and the last surviving general of any grade from the war, when he died one month shy of his 101st birthday in 1938.daggett was nominated for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general, to rank from march 13, 1865, by president andrew johnson on february 21, 1866 and was confirmed by the united states senate on april 10, 1866.during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.daggett was a brigadier general of volunteers in the spanish–american war.he was appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898.he was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army (united states) ten days before his retirement from the army on march 2, 1901.he was the son of yankee parents, whose puritan ancestors came to new england as part of the puritan migration from england in 1630.both of daggett's grandfathers served in the revolutionary war.daggett attended bates college (then called the maine state seminary) in lewiston, maine, in 1860.he also attended the monmouth academy and maine wesleyan academy.he was appointed first lieutenant, june 24, 1861.he fought at the first battle of bull run.he was appointed a captain, august 15, 1861.daggett became a major of the 5th maine infantry regiment to rank from april 14, 1863.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864.on january 23, 1865, he was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 5th united states veteran volunteer infantry regiment.he was appointed brevet colonel, march 3, 1865.he had brevet appointments as a major in the regular army for gallant and meritorious services at rappahannock station and as lieutenant colonel for services at the wilderness, both to rank from march 3, 1865.he was again mustered out of the volunteers, may 10, 1865.on february 21, 1866, president andrew johnson nominated daggett for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general of volunteers, to rank from march 13, 1865, and the united states senate confirmed the appointment on april 10, 1866.daggett believed in the abolition of slavery and fought alongside african-american soldiers during the civil war while serving with the 5th maine infantry regiment.he was also a strong supporter of the temperance movement and gave public lectures on the topic.daggett was a member of the presbyterian church.he was transferred to the 2nd u.s. infantry regiment on april 17, 1869.he was appointed major in the 13th u.s. infantry regiment on february 2, 1892.he was appointed lieutenant colonel in the 25th u.s. infantry regiment on october 1, 1895.in his military career after the civil war, aaron daggett went on to fight in the indian wars, in which he received a purple heart, the spanish–american war in china, and the philippines and received another purple heart and the gold star.(these quoted ref.do not state awarding of the a-fore referenced medals.data needs to be sourced from national military archives.)during the spanish–american war, daggett was temporarily appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898. | raphidoidea | sapiencies | unlocally | no related information |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | indazole | checkbook | transriverine <tsp> indazole | caroller | homosexual | no related information |
an island or isle is a piece of subcontinental land completely surrounded by water.very small islands such as emergent land features on atolls can be called islets, skerries, cays or keys.an island in a river or a lake island may be called an eyot or ait, and a small island off the coast may be called a holm.sedimentary islands in the ganges delta are called chars.a grouping of geographically or geologically related islands, such as the philippines, is referred to as an archipelago.there are two main types of islands in the sea: continental islands and oceanic islands.there are also artificial islands (man-made islands).there are about 900,000 official islands in the world.this number consists of all the officially-reported islands of each country.the total number of islands in the world is unknown.there may be hundreds of thousands of tiny islands that are unknown and uncounted.the number of sea islands in the world is estimated to be more than 200,000.the total area of the world's sea islands is approx.9,963,000 sq km, which is similar to the area of canada and accounts for roughly 1/15 (or 6.7%) of the total land area of earth.dutch eiland ('island'), german eiland ('small island')).however, the spelling of the word was modified in the 15th century because of a false etymology caused by an incorrect association with the etymologically unrelated old french loanword isle, which itself comes from the latin word insula.old english ieg is actually a cognate of swedish ö and german aue, and related to latin aqua (water).continents are often considered to be the largest landmass of a particular continental plate; this holds true for australia, which sits on its own continental lithosphere and tectonic plate (the australian plate).by contrast, islands are usually seen as being extensions of the oceanic crust (e.g.volcanic islands), or as belonging to a continental plate containing a larger landmass (continental islands); the latter is the case of greenland, which sits on the north american plate.examples are borneo, java, sumatra, sakhalin, taiwan and hainan off asia; new guinea, tasmania, and kangaroo island off australia; great britain, ireland, and sicily off europe; greenland, newfoundland, long island, and sable island off north america; and barbados, the falkland islands, and trinidad off south america.examples are madagascar and socotra off africa, new caledonia, new zealand, and some of the seychelles.if this island has a seashore as well as being encircled by two river systems, it becomes what might be called a subcontinental island.the one formed by wollaston lake is very large, about 2,000,000 km2 (770,000 sq mi).this includes: barrier islands, which are accumulations of sand deposited by sea currents on the continental shelves fluvial or alluvial islands formed in river deltas or midstream within large rivers.while some are transitory and may disappear if the volume or speed of the current changes, others are stable and long-lived.other definitions limit the term to only refer to islands with no past geological connections to a continental landmass.the vast majority are volcanic in origin, such as saint helena in the south atlantic ocean.the few oceanic islands that are not volcanic are tectonic in origin and arise where plate movements have lifted up the ocean floor above the surface.examples are the saint peter and saint paul archipelago in the north atlantic ocean and macquarie island in the south pacific ocean.these islands arise from volcanoes where the subduction of one plate under another is occurring.examples are the aleutian islands, the mariana islands, and most of tonga in the pacific ocean. | finland | currency | euro | no related information |
aaron simon daggett (june 14, 1837 – may 14, 1938) was a career united states army officer.he was the last surviving brevet union general of the american civil war, and the last surviving general of any grade from the war, when he died one month shy of his 101st birthday in 1938.daggett was nominated for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general, to rank from march 13, 1865, by president andrew johnson on february 21, 1866 and was confirmed by the united states senate on april 10, 1866.during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.daggett was a brigadier general of volunteers in the spanish–american war.he was appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898.he was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army (united states) ten days before his retirement from the army on march 2, 1901.he was the son of yankee parents, whose puritan ancestors came to new england as part of the puritan migration from england in 1630.both of daggett's grandfathers served in the revolutionary war.daggett attended bates college (then called the maine state seminary) in lewiston, maine, in 1860.he also attended the monmouth academy and maine wesleyan academy.he was appointed first lieutenant, june 24, 1861.he fought at the first battle of bull run.he was appointed a captain, august 15, 1861.daggett became a major of the 5th maine infantry regiment to rank from april 14, 1863.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864.on january 23, 1865, he was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 5th united states veteran volunteer infantry regiment.he was appointed brevet colonel, march 3, 1865.he had brevet appointments as a major in the regular army for gallant and meritorious services at rappahannock station and as lieutenant colonel for services at the wilderness, both to rank from march 3, 1865.he was again mustered out of the volunteers, may 10, 1865.on february 21, 1866, president andrew johnson nominated daggett for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general of volunteers, to rank from march 13, 1865, and the united states senate confirmed the appointment on april 10, 1866.daggett believed in the abolition of slavery and fought alongside african-american soldiers during the civil war while serving with the 5th maine infantry regiment.he was also a strong supporter of the temperance movement and gave public lectures on the topic.daggett was a member of the presbyterian church.he was transferred to the 2nd u.s. infantry regiment on april 17, 1869.he was appointed major in the 13th u.s. infantry regiment on february 2, 1892.he was appointed lieutenant colonel in the 25th u.s. infantry regiment on october 1, 1895.in his military career after the civil war, aaron daggett went on to fight in the indian wars, in which he received a purple heart, the spanish–american war in china, and the philippines and received another purple heart and the gold star.(these quoted ref.do not state awarding of the a-fore referenced medals.data needs to be sourced from national military archives.)during the spanish–american war, daggett was temporarily appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898. | aaron s daggett | battles | american civil war | during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.daggett was a brigadier general of volunteers in the spanish–american war.both of daggett's grandfathers served in the revolutionary war.he was again mustered out of the volunteers, may 10, 1865.on february 21, 1866, president andrew johnson nominated daggett for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general of volunteers, to rank from march 13, 1865, and the united states senate confirmed the appointment on april 10, 1866.daggett believed in the abolition of slavery and fought alongside african-american soldiers during the civil war while serving with the 5th maine infantry regiment.he was appointed lieutenant colonel in the 25th u.s. infantry regiment on october 1, 1895.in his military career after the civil war, aaron daggett went on to fight in the indian wars, in which he received a purple heart, the spanish–american war in china, and the philippines and received another purple heart and the gold star.during the spanish–american war, daggett was temporarily appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898. |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | segueing | gablewise | ambomalleal | no related information |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | american journal of mathematics | oclc number | 1480153 | no related information |
an island or isle is a piece of subcontinental land completely surrounded by water.very small islands such as emergent land features on atolls can be called islets, skerries, cays or keys.an island in a river or a lake island may be called an eyot or ait, and a small island off the coast may be called a holm.sedimentary islands in the ganges delta are called chars.a grouping of geographically or geologically related islands, such as the philippines, is referred to as an archipelago.there are two main types of islands in the sea: continental islands and oceanic islands.there are also artificial islands (man-made islands).there are about 900,000 official islands in the world.this number consists of all the officially-reported islands of each country.the total number of islands in the world is unknown.there may be hundreds of thousands of tiny islands that are unknown and uncounted.the number of sea islands in the world is estimated to be more than 200,000.the total area of the world's sea islands is approx.9,963,000 sq km, which is similar to the area of canada and accounts for roughly 1/15 (or 6.7%) of the total land area of earth.dutch eiland ('island'), german eiland ('small island')).however, the spelling of the word was modified in the 15th century because of a false etymology caused by an incorrect association with the etymologically unrelated old french loanword isle, which itself comes from the latin word insula.old english ieg is actually a cognate of swedish ö and german aue, and related to latin aqua (water).continents are often considered to be the largest landmass of a particular continental plate; this holds true for australia, which sits on its own continental lithosphere and tectonic plate (the australian plate).by contrast, islands are usually seen as being extensions of the oceanic crust (e.g.volcanic islands), or as belonging to a continental plate containing a larger landmass (continental islands); the latter is the case of greenland, which sits on the north american plate.examples are borneo, java, sumatra, sakhalin, taiwan and hainan off asia; new guinea, tasmania, and kangaroo island off australia; great britain, ireland, and sicily off europe; greenland, newfoundland, long island, and sable island off north america; and barbados, the falkland islands, and trinidad off south america.examples are madagascar and socotra off africa, new caledonia, new zealand, and some of the seychelles.if this island has a seashore as well as being encircled by two river systems, it becomes what might be called a subcontinental island.the one formed by wollaston lake is very large, about 2,000,000 km2 (770,000 sq mi).this includes: barrier islands, which are accumulations of sand deposited by sea currents on the continental shelves fluvial or alluvial islands formed in river deltas or midstream within large rivers.while some are transitory and may disappear if the volume or speed of the current changes, others are stable and long-lived.other definitions limit the term to only refer to islands with no past geological connections to a continental landmass.the vast majority are volcanic in origin, such as saint helena in the south atlantic ocean.the few oceanic islands that are not volcanic are tectonic in origin and arise where plate movements have lifted up the ocean floor above the surface.examples are the saint peter and saint paul archipelago in the north atlantic ocean and macquarie island in the south pacific ocean.these islands arise from volcanoes where the subduction of one plate under another is occurring.examples are the aleutian islands, the mariana islands, and most of tonga in the pacific ocean. | excellency | phoh | lymphangiectasis <tsp> excellency | dungbeck | glouted | no related information |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | american journal of mathematics | oclc number | 1480153 | no related information |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | unaskingly | taraktogenos | lampmaker | no related information |
aaron simon daggett (june 14, 1837 – may 14, 1938) was a career united states army officer.he was the last surviving brevet union general of the american civil war, and the last surviving general of any grade from the war, when he died one month shy of his 101st birthday in 1938.daggett was nominated for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general, to rank from march 13, 1865, by president andrew johnson on february 21, 1866 and was confirmed by the united states senate on april 10, 1866.during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.daggett was a brigadier general of volunteers in the spanish–american war.he was appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898.he was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army (united states) ten days before his retirement from the army on march 2, 1901.he was the son of yankee parents, whose puritan ancestors came to new england as part of the puritan migration from england in 1630.both of daggett's grandfathers served in the revolutionary war.daggett attended bates college (then called the maine state seminary) in lewiston, maine, in 1860.he also attended the monmouth academy and maine wesleyan academy.he was appointed first lieutenant, june 24, 1861.he fought at the first battle of bull run.he was appointed a captain, august 15, 1861.daggett became a major of the 5th maine infantry regiment to rank from april 14, 1863.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864.on january 23, 1865, he was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 5th united states veteran volunteer infantry regiment.he was appointed brevet colonel, march 3, 1865.he had brevet appointments as a major in the regular army for gallant and meritorious services at rappahannock station and as lieutenant colonel for services at the wilderness, both to rank from march 3, 1865.he was again mustered out of the volunteers, may 10, 1865.on february 21, 1866, president andrew johnson nominated daggett for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general of volunteers, to rank from march 13, 1865, and the united states senate confirmed the appointment on april 10, 1866.daggett believed in the abolition of slavery and fought alongside african-american soldiers during the civil war while serving with the 5th maine infantry regiment.he was also a strong supporter of the temperance movement and gave public lectures on the topic.daggett was a member of the presbyterian church.he was transferred to the 2nd u.s. infantry regiment on april 17, 1869.he was appointed major in the 13th u.s. infantry regiment on february 2, 1892.he was appointed lieutenant colonel in the 25th u.s. infantry regiment on october 1, 1895.in his military career after the civil war, aaron daggett went on to fight in the indian wars, in which he received a purple heart, the spanish–american war in china, and the philippines and received another purple heart and the gold star.(these quoted ref.do not state awarding of the a-fore referenced medals.data needs to be sourced from national military archives.)during the spanish–american war, daggett was temporarily appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898. | leapt | papiliones | backcasts <tsp> leapt | cutty | tile | no related information |
an island or isle is a piece of subcontinental land completely surrounded by water.very small islands such as emergent land features on atolls can be called islets, skerries, cays or keys.an island in a river or a lake island may be called an eyot or ait, and a small island off the coast may be called a holm.sedimentary islands in the ganges delta are called chars.a grouping of geographically or geologically related islands, such as the philippines, is referred to as an archipelago.there are two main types of islands in the sea: continental islands and oceanic islands.there are also artificial islands (man-made islands).there are about 900,000 official islands in the world.this number consists of all the officially-reported islands of each country.the total number of islands in the world is unknown.there may be hundreds of thousands of tiny islands that are unknown and uncounted.the number of sea islands in the world is estimated to be more than 200,000.the total area of the world's sea islands is approx.9,963,000 sq km, which is similar to the area of canada and accounts for roughly 1/15 (or 6.7%) of the total land area of earth.dutch eiland ('island'), german eiland ('small island')).however, the spelling of the word was modified in the 15th century because of a false etymology caused by an incorrect association with the etymologically unrelated old french loanword isle, which itself comes from the latin word insula.old english ieg is actually a cognate of swedish ö and german aue, and related to latin aqua (water).continents are often considered to be the largest landmass of a particular continental plate; this holds true for australia, which sits on its own continental lithosphere and tectonic plate (the australian plate).by contrast, islands are usually seen as being extensions of the oceanic crust (e.g.volcanic islands), or as belonging to a continental plate containing a larger landmass (continental islands); the latter is the case of greenland, which sits on the north american plate.examples are borneo, java, sumatra, sakhalin, taiwan and hainan off asia; new guinea, tasmania, and kangaroo island off australia; great britain, ireland, and sicily off europe; greenland, newfoundland, long island, and sable island off north america; and barbados, the falkland islands, and trinidad off south america.examples are madagascar and socotra off africa, new caledonia, new zealand, and some of the seychelles.if this island has a seashore as well as being encircled by two river systems, it becomes what might be called a subcontinental island.the one formed by wollaston lake is very large, about 2,000,000 km2 (770,000 sq mi).this includes: barrier islands, which are accumulations of sand deposited by sea currents on the continental shelves fluvial or alluvial islands formed in river deltas or midstream within large rivers.while some are transitory and may disappear if the volume or speed of the current changes, others are stable and long-lived.other definitions limit the term to only refer to islands with no past geological connections to a continental landmass.the vast majority are volcanic in origin, such as saint helena in the south atlantic ocean.the few oceanic islands that are not volcanic are tectonic in origin and arise where plate movements have lifted up the ocean floor above the surface.examples are the saint peter and saint paul archipelago in the north atlantic ocean and macquarie island in the south pacific ocean.these islands arise from volcanoes where the subduction of one plate under another is occurring.examples are the aleutian islands, the mariana islands, and most of tonga in the pacific ocean. | finland | demonym | finns | no related information |
aaron simon daggett (june 14, 1837 – may 14, 1938) was a career united states army officer.he was the last surviving brevet union general of the american civil war, and the last surviving general of any grade from the war, when he died one month shy of his 101st birthday in 1938.daggett was nominated for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general, to rank from march 13, 1865, by president andrew johnson on february 21, 1866 and was confirmed by the united states senate on april 10, 1866.during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.daggett was a brigadier general of volunteers in the spanish–american war.he was appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898.he was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army (united states) ten days before his retirement from the army on march 2, 1901.he was the son of yankee parents, whose puritan ancestors came to new england as part of the puritan migration from england in 1630.both of daggett's grandfathers served in the revolutionary war.daggett attended bates college (then called the maine state seminary) in lewiston, maine, in 1860.he also attended the monmouth academy and maine wesleyan academy.he was appointed first lieutenant, june 24, 1861.he fought at the first battle of bull run.he was appointed a captain, august 15, 1861.daggett became a major of the 5th maine infantry regiment to rank from april 14, 1863.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864.on january 23, 1865, he was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 5th united states veteran volunteer infantry regiment.he was appointed brevet colonel, march 3, 1865.he had brevet appointments as a major in the regular army for gallant and meritorious services at rappahannock station and as lieutenant colonel for services at the wilderness, both to rank from march 3, 1865.he was again mustered out of the volunteers, may 10, 1865.on february 21, 1866, president andrew johnson nominated daggett for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general of volunteers, to rank from march 13, 1865, and the united states senate confirmed the appointment on april 10, 1866.daggett believed in the abolition of slavery and fought alongside african-american soldiers during the civil war while serving with the 5th maine infantry regiment.he was also a strong supporter of the temperance movement and gave public lectures on the topic.daggett was a member of the presbyterian church.he was transferred to the 2nd u.s. infantry regiment on april 17, 1869.he was appointed major in the 13th u.s. infantry regiment on february 2, 1892.he was appointed lieutenant colonel in the 25th u.s. infantry regiment on october 1, 1895.in his military career after the civil war, aaron daggett went on to fight in the indian wars, in which he received a purple heart, the spanish–american war in china, and the philippines and received another purple heart and the gold star.(these quoted ref.do not state awarding of the a-fore referenced medals.data needs to be sourced from national military archives.)during the spanish–american war, daggett was temporarily appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898. | aaron s daggett | battles | battle of antietam | during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor. |
ardmore airport (iata: amz, icao: nzar) is an airport 3 nautical miles (5.5 km) southeast of manurewa in auckland, new zealand.due to developments in the pacific war it was never used for this purpose but was instead was used by the rnzaf, who operated corsair fighters.rnzaf auckland operations were consolidated at whenuapai after world war ii.from the post-war years until the mid-1970s the grounds were home to a teacher training unit and the auckland university school of engineering.in 1954 and 1955, about 70,000 spectators attended the event.local authorities made the decision to open the facility to general aviation and the grand prix was moved to pukekohe upon completion of a purpose built facility there.british racing driver ken wharton was killed at the nz grand prix at ardmore on 12 january 1957 when he crashed his ferrari monza.traffic mainly consists of small private aircraft and the classic aircraft of the new zealand warbirds association, which is based there.businesses in the airfield include several flying schools, maintenance, fuel and aircraft restoration.buildings are situated around aprons to the north, west, south and southeast.a control tower remains in the centre of the field but this is no longer used for air traffic control.it is now used as a unicom service.there used to be a 07/25 sealed runway but this is no longer used and is now a taxiway (taxiway juliet).the airfield has a circuit height of 1,100 ft (340 m) for fixed-wing aircraft, 800 ft (240 m) for helicopters.the circuit for runways 03 and 07 is right-hand while that for runways 21 and 25 is left-hand.the airfield is serviced by two r-nav (gps) arrivals, one for each runway (03 and 21).the airport itself is uncontrolled and located within a mandatory broadcast zone (mbz).this airspace is monitored by the ardmore unicom service who operate during daylight hours.the aerodrome is located to the south east of auckland international airport airspace.fg off d.g.a.ritchie later died of injuries.6 march 1945 - a corsair turned onto its back while coming in to land.flt sgt j.w.wright was injured.3 december 2009 - a restored spitfire tipped onto its nose while landing, damaging the propeller and undercarriage.27 september 2010 - a helicopter with two people on board was reported (by tv3 news) to have crashed.the aircraft reported a technical problem.a witness said the helicopter circled the aerodrome using up fuel and then the engine was cut and it glided in to land safely.4 january 2014 - a barber snark (zk-jek) landed and vacated the runway before catching fire.both occupants escaped without injury.6 march 2014 - a light twin beechcraft duchess suffered an undercarriage failure on the runway at ardmore.29 june 2014 - a light aircraft, cessna 152, had to make an emergency landing in a field approx.3nm east of the airfield.the aircraft made a successful landing in the field before flipping upside down.28 september 2016 - a t-28 trojan successfully made a belly landing after its landing gear failed. | pteroma | croons | unctorian <tsp> pteroma | antitropic | spumiest | no related information |
aaron simon daggett (june 14, 1837 – may 14, 1938) was a career united states army officer.he was the last surviving brevet union general of the american civil war, and the last surviving general of any grade from the war, when he died one month shy of his 101st birthday in 1938.daggett was nominated for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general, to rank from march 13, 1865, by president andrew johnson on february 21, 1866 and was confirmed by the united states senate on april 10, 1866.during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.daggett was a brigadier general of volunteers in the spanish–american war.he was appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898.he was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army (united states) ten days before his retirement from the army on march 2, 1901.he was the son of yankee parents, whose puritan ancestors came to new england as part of the puritan migration from england in 1630.both of daggett's grandfathers served in the revolutionary war.daggett attended bates college (then called the maine state seminary) in lewiston, maine, in 1860.he also attended the monmouth academy and maine wesleyan academy.he was appointed first lieutenant, june 24, 1861.he fought at the first battle of bull run.he was appointed a captain, august 15, 1861.daggett became a major of the 5th maine infantry regiment to rank from april 14, 1863.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864.on january 23, 1865, he was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 5th united states veteran volunteer infantry regiment.he was appointed brevet colonel, march 3, 1865.he had brevet appointments as a major in the regular army for gallant and meritorious services at rappahannock station and as lieutenant colonel for services at the wilderness, both to rank from march 3, 1865.he was again mustered out of the volunteers, may 10, 1865.on february 21, 1866, president andrew johnson nominated daggett for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general of volunteers, to rank from march 13, 1865, and the united states senate confirmed the appointment on april 10, 1866.daggett believed in the abolition of slavery and fought alongside african-american soldiers during the civil war while serving with the 5th maine infantry regiment.he was also a strong supporter of the temperance movement and gave public lectures on the topic.daggett was a member of the presbyterian church.he was transferred to the 2nd u.s. infantry regiment on april 17, 1869.he was appointed major in the 13th u.s. infantry regiment on february 2, 1892.he was appointed lieutenant colonel in the 25th u.s. infantry regiment on october 1, 1895.in his military career after the civil war, aaron daggett went on to fight in the indian wars, in which he received a purple heart, the spanish–american war in china, and the philippines and received another purple heart and the gold star.(these quoted ref.do not state awarding of the a-fore referenced medals.data needs to be sourced from national military archives.)during the spanish–american war, daggett was temporarily appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898. | aaron s daggett | battles | battle of cold harbor | during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864. |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | outtakes | mandarindom | upswelled <tsp> outtakes | parliamenter | hile | no related information |
an island or isle is a piece of subcontinental land completely surrounded by water.very small islands such as emergent land features on atolls can be called islets, skerries, cays or keys.an island in a river or a lake island may be called an eyot or ait, and a small island off the coast may be called a holm.sedimentary islands in the ganges delta are called chars.a grouping of geographically or geologically related islands, such as the philippines, is referred to as an archipelago.there are two main types of islands in the sea: continental islands and oceanic islands.there are also artificial islands (man-made islands).there are about 900,000 official islands in the world.this number consists of all the officially-reported islands of each country.the total number of islands in the world is unknown.there may be hundreds of thousands of tiny islands that are unknown and uncounted.the number of sea islands in the world is estimated to be more than 200,000.the total area of the world's sea islands is approx.9,963,000 sq km, which is similar to the area of canada and accounts for roughly 1/15 (or 6.7%) of the total land area of earth.dutch eiland ('island'), german eiland ('small island')).however, the spelling of the word was modified in the 15th century because of a false etymology caused by an incorrect association with the etymologically unrelated old french loanword isle, which itself comes from the latin word insula.old english ieg is actually a cognate of swedish ö and german aue, and related to latin aqua (water).continents are often considered to be the largest landmass of a particular continental plate; this holds true for australia, which sits on its own continental lithosphere and tectonic plate (the australian plate).by contrast, islands are usually seen as being extensions of the oceanic crust (e.g.volcanic islands), or as belonging to a continental plate containing a larger landmass (continental islands); the latter is the case of greenland, which sits on the north american plate.examples are borneo, java, sumatra, sakhalin, taiwan and hainan off asia; new guinea, tasmania, and kangaroo island off australia; great britain, ireland, and sicily off europe; greenland, newfoundland, long island, and sable island off north america; and barbados, the falkland islands, and trinidad off south america.examples are madagascar and socotra off africa, new caledonia, new zealand, and some of the seychelles.if this island has a seashore as well as being encircled by two river systems, it becomes what might be called a subcontinental island.the one formed by wollaston lake is very large, about 2,000,000 km2 (770,000 sq mi).this includes: barrier islands, which are accumulations of sand deposited by sea currents on the continental shelves fluvial or alluvial islands formed in river deltas or midstream within large rivers.while some are transitory and may disappear if the volume or speed of the current changes, others are stable and long-lived.other definitions limit the term to only refer to islands with no past geological connections to a continental landmass.the vast majority are volcanic in origin, such as saint helena in the south atlantic ocean.the few oceanic islands that are not volcanic are tectonic in origin and arise where plate movements have lifted up the ocean floor above the surface.examples are the saint peter and saint paul archipelago in the north atlantic ocean and macquarie island in the south pacific ocean.these islands arise from volcanoes where the subduction of one plate under another is occurring.examples are the aleutian islands, the mariana islands, and most of tonga in the pacific ocean. | equivocality | bhikku | yapped | no related information |
aaron simon daggett (june 14, 1837 – may 14, 1938) was a career united states army officer.he was the last surviving brevet union general of the american civil war, and the last surviving general of any grade from the war, when he died one month shy of his 101st birthday in 1938.daggett was nominated for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general, to rank from march 13, 1865, by president andrew johnson on february 21, 1866 and was confirmed by the united states senate on april 10, 1866.during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.daggett was a brigadier general of volunteers in the spanish–american war.he was appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898.he was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army (united states) ten days before his retirement from the army on march 2, 1901.he was the son of yankee parents, whose puritan ancestors came to new england as part of the puritan migration from england in 1630.both of daggett's grandfathers served in the revolutionary war.daggett attended bates college (then called the maine state seminary) in lewiston, maine, in 1860.he also attended the monmouth academy and maine wesleyan academy.he was appointed first lieutenant, june 24, 1861.he fought at the first battle of bull run.he was appointed a captain, august 15, 1861.daggett became a major of the 5th maine infantry regiment to rank from april 14, 1863.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864.on january 23, 1865, he was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 5th united states veteran volunteer infantry regiment.he was appointed brevet colonel, march 3, 1865.he had brevet appointments as a major in the regular army for gallant and meritorious services at rappahannock station and as lieutenant colonel for services at the wilderness, both to rank from march 3, 1865.he was again mustered out of the volunteers, may 10, 1865.on february 21, 1866, president andrew johnson nominated daggett for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general of volunteers, to rank from march 13, 1865, and the united states senate confirmed the appointment on april 10, 1866.daggett believed in the abolition of slavery and fought alongside african-american soldiers during the civil war while serving with the 5th maine infantry regiment.he was also a strong supporter of the temperance movement and gave public lectures on the topic.daggett was a member of the presbyterian church.he was transferred to the 2nd u.s. infantry regiment on april 17, 1869.he was appointed major in the 13th u.s. infantry regiment on february 2, 1892.he was appointed lieutenant colonel in the 25th u.s. infantry regiment on october 1, 1895.in his military career after the civil war, aaron daggett went on to fight in the indian wars, in which he received a purple heart, the spanish–american war in china, and the philippines and received another purple heart and the gold star.(these quoted ref.do not state awarding of the a-fore referenced medals.data needs to be sourced from national military archives.)during the spanish–american war, daggett was temporarily appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898. | aaron s daggett | battles | battle of cold harbor | during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864. |
ashgabat international airport (turkmen: aşgabat halkara howa menzili) (iata: asb, icao: utaa), formerly known as saparmyrat türkmenbaşy international airport, is one of five international airports in turkmenistan.it is located within the city limits of ashgabat (ashkhabad).the old airport, with its air traffic control tower and a 3,700-metre-long (12,000 ft) precision approach runway (12l-30r), opened in 1994 and was named after the country's first president, saparmyrat niyazov.the new airport terminal opened in september 2016, after being completely redesigned and rebuilt and after the south runway was moved and lengthened to parallel the north runway.for this route, four-passenger junkers f.13 aircraft were purchased in germany, as well as soviet four-passenger kalinin k-4 aircraft.eight aircraft served this airline.later, in 1932, newer soviet aircraft were purchased for the transport of passengers.the kalinin k-5 aircraft seated six, and the tupolev ant-9 aircraft had twelve seats.with this replenishment of the turkmen ssr air fleet, in 1932 an air division was formed at chardzhou airport that directly served the chardzhou-tashauz route, without stops in other settlements.in soviet times, the airport was used exclusively for servicing flights within the ussr.currently, in addition to the aircraft of the local airline fleet, the airport serves the planes of several foreign airlines of the world, performing both passenger and cargo flights.in soviet times, the airport was used exclusively for domestic flights.as part of saparmurat niyazov's aspiration to transform turkmenistan into 'the new kuwait', he sought to construct a distinctive airport.this zeal resulted in the control tower being constructed on the wrong side of the runway.the 'gaudy new terminal' now blocked the view of air traffic controllers as they guided pilots.the builders warned him of this, however, he responded that, 'it looks better this way.'the building was dismantled in 2013.polimeks, a turkish construction company active in turkmenistan since the late-1990s, was declared winner of the tender.the new airport was opened on 17 september 2016 by president gurbanguly berdimuhamedow.the project cost $2.3 billion (€1.7 billion) and features a highly unusual terminal design in the shape of a falcon.the new airport has capacity to serve 14 million passengers per year at a rate of 1,600 passengers per hour.the airport covers 350,000 m2 and includes a passenger terminal, vip terminal, cargo terminal with capacity to handle 200,000 tonnes of freight per year, a new air traffic control tower (atct), a maintenance hangar for three narrow-body aircraft, new fueling stations, catering, fire brigade, flight simulation, repair and maintenance buildings, parking space for 3,000 cars, a civil aviation school as well as a medical center.the airport has also a second 3,800-meter long runway to serve wide-body, double-deck jet airliners such as the airbus a380 and boeing 747-8.all services of the airport work around the clock.the airport includes passenger waiting rooms, immigration, customs, border control, a 24-hour reference service, vip and cip rooms, a business club, a ticket office for (turkmenistan airlines), shops, bars, fast-food outlets, currency exchange, a new baggage handling conveyor system, international telephone, a mother and child room and the offices for (star alliance air carriers and turkish airlines).on 26 march 2014, a small passenger terminal was opened during a ceremony attended by president gurbanguly berdimuhamedow.the terminal is located on the site of a pre-existing turkmen ssr airport (behind the bus station) on 2013 street (cosmonaut boulevard).for the period of construction of the main passenger terminal the temporary terminal served passengers departing from and arriving to ashgabat.after commissioning of the main terminal, the terminal was used for domestic routes and charter flights. | ashgabat international airport | 1st runway lengthfeet | 12467 | no related information |
aaron simon daggett (june 14, 1837 – may 14, 1938) was a career united states army officer.he was the last surviving brevet union general of the american civil war, and the last surviving general of any grade from the war, when he died one month shy of his 101st birthday in 1938.daggett was nominated for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general, to rank from march 13, 1865, by president andrew johnson on february 21, 1866 and was confirmed by the united states senate on april 10, 1866.during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.daggett was a brigadier general of volunteers in the spanish–american war.he was appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898.he was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army (united states) ten days before his retirement from the army on march 2, 1901.he was the son of yankee parents, whose puritan ancestors came to new england as part of the puritan migration from england in 1630.both of daggett's grandfathers served in the revolutionary war.daggett attended bates college (then called the maine state seminary) in lewiston, maine, in 1860.he also attended the monmouth academy and maine wesleyan academy.he was appointed first lieutenant, june 24, 1861.he fought at the first battle of bull run.he was appointed a captain, august 15, 1861.daggett became a major of the 5th maine infantry regiment to rank from april 14, 1863.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864.on january 23, 1865, he was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 5th united states veteran volunteer infantry regiment.he was appointed brevet colonel, march 3, 1865.he had brevet appointments as a major in the regular army for gallant and meritorious services at rappahannock station and as lieutenant colonel for services at the wilderness, both to rank from march 3, 1865.he was again mustered out of the volunteers, may 10, 1865.on february 21, 1866, president andrew johnson nominated daggett for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general of volunteers, to rank from march 13, 1865, and the united states senate confirmed the appointment on april 10, 1866.daggett believed in the abolition of slavery and fought alongside african-american soldiers during the civil war while serving with the 5th maine infantry regiment.he was also a strong supporter of the temperance movement and gave public lectures on the topic.daggett was a member of the presbyterian church.he was transferred to the 2nd u.s. infantry regiment on april 17, 1869.he was appointed major in the 13th u.s. infantry regiment on february 2, 1892.he was appointed lieutenant colonel in the 25th u.s. infantry regiment on october 1, 1895.in his military career after the civil war, aaron daggett went on to fight in the indian wars, in which he received a purple heart, the spanish–american war in china, and the philippines and received another purple heart and the gold star.(these quoted ref.do not state awarding of the a-fore referenced medals.data needs to be sourced from national military archives.)during the spanish–american war, daggett was temporarily appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898. | aaron s daggett | battles | battle of cold harbor | during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864. |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | tatsanottine | parishionership | roulette <tsp> tatsanottine | serendipitously | mungoos | no related information |
aaron simon daggett (june 14, 1837 – may 14, 1938) was a career united states army officer.he was the last surviving brevet union general of the american civil war, and the last surviving general of any grade from the war, when he died one month shy of his 101st birthday in 1938.daggett was nominated for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general, to rank from march 13, 1865, by president andrew johnson on february 21, 1866 and was confirmed by the united states senate on april 10, 1866.during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.daggett was a brigadier general of volunteers in the spanish–american war.he was appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898.he was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army (united states) ten days before his retirement from the army on march 2, 1901.he was the son of yankee parents, whose puritan ancestors came to new england as part of the puritan migration from england in 1630.both of daggett's grandfathers served in the revolutionary war.daggett attended bates college (then called the maine state seminary) in lewiston, maine, in 1860.he also attended the monmouth academy and maine wesleyan academy.he was appointed first lieutenant, june 24, 1861.he fought at the first battle of bull run.he was appointed a captain, august 15, 1861.daggett became a major of the 5th maine infantry regiment to rank from april 14, 1863.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864.on january 23, 1865, he was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 5th united states veteran volunteer infantry regiment.he was appointed brevet colonel, march 3, 1865.he had brevet appointments as a major in the regular army for gallant and meritorious services at rappahannock station and as lieutenant colonel for services at the wilderness, both to rank from march 3, 1865.he was again mustered out of the volunteers, may 10, 1865.on february 21, 1866, president andrew johnson nominated daggett for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general of volunteers, to rank from march 13, 1865, and the united states senate confirmed the appointment on april 10, 1866.daggett believed in the abolition of slavery and fought alongside african-american soldiers during the civil war while serving with the 5th maine infantry regiment.he was also a strong supporter of the temperance movement and gave public lectures on the topic.daggett was a member of the presbyterian church.he was transferred to the 2nd u.s. infantry regiment on april 17, 1869.he was appointed major in the 13th u.s. infantry regiment on february 2, 1892.he was appointed lieutenant colonel in the 25th u.s. infantry regiment on october 1, 1895.in his military career after the civil war, aaron daggett went on to fight in the indian wars, in which he received a purple heart, the spanish–american war in china, and the philippines and received another purple heart and the gold star.(these quoted ref.do not state awarding of the a-fore referenced medals.data needs to be sourced from national military archives.)during the spanish–american war, daggett was temporarily appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898. | aaron s daggett | battles | battle of fredericksburg | during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864. |
ashgabat international airport (turkmen: aşgabat halkara howa menzili) (iata: asb, icao: utaa), formerly known as saparmyrat türkmenbaşy international airport, is one of five international airports in turkmenistan.it is located within the city limits of ashgabat (ashkhabad).the old airport, with its air traffic control tower and a 3,700-metre-long (12,000 ft) precision approach runway (12l-30r), opened in 1994 and was named after the country's first president, saparmyrat niyazov.the new airport terminal opened in september 2016, after being completely redesigned and rebuilt and after the south runway was moved and lengthened to parallel the north runway.for this route, four-passenger junkers f.13 aircraft were purchased in germany, as well as soviet four-passenger kalinin k-4 aircraft.eight aircraft served this airline.later, in 1932, newer soviet aircraft were purchased for the transport of passengers.the kalinin k-5 aircraft seated six, and the tupolev ant-9 aircraft had twelve seats.with this replenishment of the turkmen ssr air fleet, in 1932 an air division was formed at chardzhou airport that directly served the chardzhou-tashauz route, without stops in other settlements.in soviet times, the airport was used exclusively for servicing flights within the ussr.currently, in addition to the aircraft of the local airline fleet, the airport serves the planes of several foreign airlines of the world, performing both passenger and cargo flights.in soviet times, the airport was used exclusively for domestic flights.as part of saparmurat niyazov's aspiration to transform turkmenistan into 'the new kuwait', he sought to construct a distinctive airport.this zeal resulted in the control tower being constructed on the wrong side of the runway.the 'gaudy new terminal' now blocked the view of air traffic controllers as they guided pilots.the builders warned him of this, however, he responded that, 'it looks better this way.'the building was dismantled in 2013.polimeks, a turkish construction company active in turkmenistan since the late-1990s, was declared winner of the tender.the new airport was opened on 17 september 2016 by president gurbanguly berdimuhamedow.the project cost $2.3 billion (€1.7 billion) and features a highly unusual terminal design in the shape of a falcon.the new airport has capacity to serve 14 million passengers per year at a rate of 1,600 passengers per hour.the airport covers 350,000 m2 and includes a passenger terminal, vip terminal, cargo terminal with capacity to handle 200,000 tonnes of freight per year, a new air traffic control tower (atct), a maintenance hangar for three narrow-body aircraft, new fueling stations, catering, fire brigade, flight simulation, repair and maintenance buildings, parking space for 3,000 cars, a civil aviation school as well as a medical center.the airport has also a second 3,800-meter long runway to serve wide-body, double-deck jet airliners such as the airbus a380 and boeing 747-8.all services of the airport work around the clock.the airport includes passenger waiting rooms, immigration, customs, border control, a 24-hour reference service, vip and cip rooms, a business club, a ticket office for (turkmenistan airlines), shops, bars, fast-food outlets, currency exchange, a new baggage handling conveyor system, international telephone, a mother and child room and the offices for (star alliance air carriers and turkish airlines).on 26 march 2014, a small passenger terminal was opened during a ceremony attended by president gurbanguly berdimuhamedow.the terminal is located on the site of a pre-existing turkmen ssr airport (behind the bus station) on 2013 street (cosmonaut boulevard).for the period of construction of the main passenger terminal the temporary terminal served passengers departing from and arriving to ashgabat.after commissioning of the main terminal, the terminal was used for domestic routes and charter flights. | rheumative | crunches | steatopygous <tsp> rheumative | dermol | knuckleheads | no related information |
an island or isle is a piece of subcontinental land completely surrounded by water.very small islands such as emergent land features on atolls can be called islets, skerries, cays or keys.an island in a river or a lake island may be called an eyot or ait, and a small island off the coast may be called a holm.sedimentary islands in the ganges delta are called chars.a grouping of geographically or geologically related islands, such as the philippines, is referred to as an archipelago.there are two main types of islands in the sea: continental islands and oceanic islands.there are also artificial islands (man-made islands).there are about 900,000 official islands in the world.this number consists of all the officially-reported islands of each country.the total number of islands in the world is unknown.there may be hundreds of thousands of tiny islands that are unknown and uncounted.the number of sea islands in the world is estimated to be more than 200,000.the total area of the world's sea islands is approx.9,963,000 sq km, which is similar to the area of canada and accounts for roughly 1/15 (or 6.7%) of the total land area of earth.dutch eiland ('island'), german eiland ('small island')).however, the spelling of the word was modified in the 15th century because of a false etymology caused by an incorrect association with the etymologically unrelated old french loanword isle, which itself comes from the latin word insula.old english ieg is actually a cognate of swedish ö and german aue, and related to latin aqua (water).continents are often considered to be the largest landmass of a particular continental plate; this holds true for australia, which sits on its own continental lithosphere and tectonic plate (the australian plate).by contrast, islands are usually seen as being extensions of the oceanic crust (e.g.volcanic islands), or as belonging to a continental plate containing a larger landmass (continental islands); the latter is the case of greenland, which sits on the north american plate.examples are borneo, java, sumatra, sakhalin, taiwan and hainan off asia; new guinea, tasmania, and kangaroo island off australia; great britain, ireland, and sicily off europe; greenland, newfoundland, long island, and sable island off north america; and barbados, the falkland islands, and trinidad off south america.examples are madagascar and socotra off africa, new caledonia, new zealand, and some of the seychelles.if this island has a seashore as well as being encircled by two river systems, it becomes what might be called a subcontinental island.the one formed by wollaston lake is very large, about 2,000,000 km2 (770,000 sq mi).this includes: barrier islands, which are accumulations of sand deposited by sea currents on the continental shelves fluvial or alluvial islands formed in river deltas or midstream within large rivers.while some are transitory and may disappear if the volume or speed of the current changes, others are stable and long-lived.other definitions limit the term to only refer to islands with no past geological connections to a continental landmass.the vast majority are volcanic in origin, such as saint helena in the south atlantic ocean.the few oceanic islands that are not volcanic are tectonic in origin and arise where plate movements have lifted up the ocean floor above the surface.examples are the saint peter and saint paul archipelago in the north atlantic ocean and macquarie island in the south pacific ocean.these islands arise from volcanoes where the subduction of one plate under another is occurring.examples are the aleutian islands, the mariana islands, and most of tonga in the pacific ocean. | cameration | archerfishes | whitsun | no related information |
ashgabat international airport (turkmen: aşgabat halkara howa menzili) (iata: asb, icao: utaa), formerly known as saparmyrat türkmenbaşy international airport, is one of five international airports in turkmenistan.it is located within the city limits of ashgabat (ashkhabad).the old airport, with its air traffic control tower and a 3,700-metre-long (12,000 ft) precision approach runway (12l-30r), opened in 1994 and was named after the country's first president, saparmyrat niyazov.the new airport terminal opened in september 2016, after being completely redesigned and rebuilt and after the south runway was moved and lengthened to parallel the north runway.for this route, four-passenger junkers f.13 aircraft were purchased in germany, as well as soviet four-passenger kalinin k-4 aircraft.eight aircraft served this airline.later, in 1932, newer soviet aircraft were purchased for the transport of passengers.the kalinin k-5 aircraft seated six, and the tupolev ant-9 aircraft had twelve seats.with this replenishment of the turkmen ssr air fleet, in 1932 an air division was formed at chardzhou airport that directly served the chardzhou-tashauz route, without stops in other settlements.in soviet times, the airport was used exclusively for servicing flights within the ussr.currently, in addition to the aircraft of the local airline fleet, the airport serves the planes of several foreign airlines of the world, performing both passenger and cargo flights.in soviet times, the airport was used exclusively for domestic flights.as part of saparmurat niyazov's aspiration to transform turkmenistan into 'the new kuwait', he sought to construct a distinctive airport.this zeal resulted in the control tower being constructed on the wrong side of the runway.the 'gaudy new terminal' now blocked the view of air traffic controllers as they guided pilots.the builders warned him of this, however, he responded that, 'it looks better this way.'the building was dismantled in 2013.polimeks, a turkish construction company active in turkmenistan since the late-1990s, was declared winner of the tender.the new airport was opened on 17 september 2016 by president gurbanguly berdimuhamedow.the project cost $2.3 billion (€1.7 billion) and features a highly unusual terminal design in the shape of a falcon.the new airport has capacity to serve 14 million passengers per year at a rate of 1,600 passengers per hour.the airport covers 350,000 m2 and includes a passenger terminal, vip terminal, cargo terminal with capacity to handle 200,000 tonnes of freight per year, a new air traffic control tower (atct), a maintenance hangar for three narrow-body aircraft, new fueling stations, catering, fire brigade, flight simulation, repair and maintenance buildings, parking space for 3,000 cars, a civil aviation school as well as a medical center.the airport has also a second 3,800-meter long runway to serve wide-body, double-deck jet airliners such as the airbus a380 and boeing 747-8.all services of the airport work around the clock.the airport includes passenger waiting rooms, immigration, customs, border control, a 24-hour reference service, vip and cip rooms, a business club, a ticket office for (turkmenistan airlines), shops, bars, fast-food outlets, currency exchange, a new baggage handling conveyor system, international telephone, a mother and child room and the offices for (star alliance air carriers and turkish airlines).on 26 march 2014, a small passenger terminal was opened during a ceremony attended by president gurbanguly berdimuhamedow.the terminal is located on the site of a pre-existing turkmen ssr airport (behind the bus station) on 2013 street (cosmonaut boulevard).for the period of construction of the main passenger terminal the temporary terminal served passengers departing from and arriving to ashgabat.after commissioning of the main terminal, the terminal was used for domestic routes and charter flights. | ashgabat international airport | 1st runway lengthfeet | 12467 | no related information |
aaron simon daggett (june 14, 1837 – may 14, 1938) was a career united states army officer.he was the last surviving brevet union general of the american civil war, and the last surviving general of any grade from the war, when he died one month shy of his 101st birthday in 1938.daggett was nominated for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general, to rank from march 13, 1865, by president andrew johnson on february 21, 1866 and was confirmed by the united states senate on april 10, 1866.during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.daggett was a brigadier general of volunteers in the spanish–american war.he was appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898.he was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army (united states) ten days before his retirement from the army on march 2, 1901.he was the son of yankee parents, whose puritan ancestors came to new england as part of the puritan migration from england in 1630.both of daggett's grandfathers served in the revolutionary war.daggett attended bates college (then called the maine state seminary) in lewiston, maine, in 1860.he also attended the monmouth academy and maine wesleyan academy.he was appointed first lieutenant, june 24, 1861.he fought at the first battle of bull run.he was appointed a captain, august 15, 1861.daggett became a major of the 5th maine infantry regiment to rank from april 14, 1863.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864.on january 23, 1865, he was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 5th united states veteran volunteer infantry regiment.he was appointed brevet colonel, march 3, 1865.he had brevet appointments as a major in the regular army for gallant and meritorious services at rappahannock station and as lieutenant colonel for services at the wilderness, both to rank from march 3, 1865.he was again mustered out of the volunteers, may 10, 1865.on february 21, 1866, president andrew johnson nominated daggett for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general of volunteers, to rank from march 13, 1865, and the united states senate confirmed the appointment on april 10, 1866.daggett believed in the abolition of slavery and fought alongside african-american soldiers during the civil war while serving with the 5th maine infantry regiment.he was also a strong supporter of the temperance movement and gave public lectures on the topic.daggett was a member of the presbyterian church.he was transferred to the 2nd u.s. infantry regiment on april 17, 1869.he was appointed major in the 13th u.s. infantry regiment on february 2, 1892.he was appointed lieutenant colonel in the 25th u.s. infantry regiment on october 1, 1895.in his military career after the civil war, aaron daggett went on to fight in the indian wars, in which he received a purple heart, the spanish–american war in china, and the philippines and received another purple heart and the gold star.(these quoted ref.do not state awarding of the a-fore referenced medals.data needs to be sourced from national military archives.)during the spanish–american war, daggett was temporarily appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898. | aaron s daggett | battles | battle of fredericksburg | during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864. |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | tornillos | planetabler | overoptimistically <tsp> tornillos | cypseline | oversorrowfulness | no related information |
an island or isle is a piece of subcontinental land completely surrounded by water.very small islands such as emergent land features on atolls can be called islets, skerries, cays or keys.an island in a river or a lake island may be called an eyot or ait, and a small island off the coast may be called a holm.sedimentary islands in the ganges delta are called chars.a grouping of geographically or geologically related islands, such as the philippines, is referred to as an archipelago.there are two main types of islands in the sea: continental islands and oceanic islands.there are also artificial islands (man-made islands).there are about 900,000 official islands in the world.this number consists of all the officially-reported islands of each country.the total number of islands in the world is unknown.there may be hundreds of thousands of tiny islands that are unknown and uncounted.the number of sea islands in the world is estimated to be more than 200,000.the total area of the world's sea islands is approx.9,963,000 sq km, which is similar to the area of canada and accounts for roughly 1/15 (or 6.7%) of the total land area of earth.dutch eiland ('island'), german eiland ('small island')).however, the spelling of the word was modified in the 15th century because of a false etymology caused by an incorrect association with the etymologically unrelated old french loanword isle, which itself comes from the latin word insula.old english ieg is actually a cognate of swedish ö and german aue, and related to latin aqua (water).continents are often considered to be the largest landmass of a particular continental plate; this holds true for australia, which sits on its own continental lithosphere and tectonic plate (the australian plate).by contrast, islands are usually seen as being extensions of the oceanic crust (e.g.volcanic islands), or as belonging to a continental plate containing a larger landmass (continental islands); the latter is the case of greenland, which sits on the north american plate.examples are borneo, java, sumatra, sakhalin, taiwan and hainan off asia; new guinea, tasmania, and kangaroo island off australia; great britain, ireland, and sicily off europe; greenland, newfoundland, long island, and sable island off north america; and barbados, the falkland islands, and trinidad off south america.examples are madagascar and socotra off africa, new caledonia, new zealand, and some of the seychelles.if this island has a seashore as well as being encircled by two river systems, it becomes what might be called a subcontinental island.the one formed by wollaston lake is very large, about 2,000,000 km2 (770,000 sq mi).this includes: barrier islands, which are accumulations of sand deposited by sea currents on the continental shelves fluvial or alluvial islands formed in river deltas or midstream within large rivers.while some are transitory and may disappear if the volume or speed of the current changes, others are stable and long-lived.other definitions limit the term to only refer to islands with no past geological connections to a continental landmass.the vast majority are volcanic in origin, such as saint helena in the south atlantic ocean.the few oceanic islands that are not volcanic are tectonic in origin and arise where plate movements have lifted up the ocean floor above the surface.examples are the saint peter and saint paul archipelago in the north atlantic ocean and macquarie island in the south pacific ocean.these islands arise from volcanoes where the subduction of one plate under another is occurring.examples are the aleutian islands, the mariana islands, and most of tonga in the pacific ocean. | dispoint | electra | eweries | no related information |
aaron simon daggett (june 14, 1837 – may 14, 1938) was a career united states army officer.he was the last surviving brevet union general of the american civil war, and the last surviving general of any grade from the war, when he died one month shy of his 101st birthday in 1938.daggett was nominated for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general, to rank from march 13, 1865, by president andrew johnson on february 21, 1866 and was confirmed by the united states senate on april 10, 1866.during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.daggett was a brigadier general of volunteers in the spanish–american war.he was appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898.he was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army (united states) ten days before his retirement from the army on march 2, 1901.he was the son of yankee parents, whose puritan ancestors came to new england as part of the puritan migration from england in 1630.both of daggett's grandfathers served in the revolutionary war.daggett attended bates college (then called the maine state seminary) in lewiston, maine, in 1860.he also attended the monmouth academy and maine wesleyan academy.he was appointed first lieutenant, june 24, 1861.he fought at the first battle of bull run.he was appointed a captain, august 15, 1861.daggett became a major of the 5th maine infantry regiment to rank from april 14, 1863.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864.on january 23, 1865, he was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 5th united states veteran volunteer infantry regiment.he was appointed brevet colonel, march 3, 1865.he had brevet appointments as a major in the regular army for gallant and meritorious services at rappahannock station and as lieutenant colonel for services at the wilderness, both to rank from march 3, 1865.he was again mustered out of the volunteers, may 10, 1865.on february 21, 1866, president andrew johnson nominated daggett for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general of volunteers, to rank from march 13, 1865, and the united states senate confirmed the appointment on april 10, 1866.daggett believed in the abolition of slavery and fought alongside african-american soldiers during the civil war while serving with the 5th maine infantry regiment.he was also a strong supporter of the temperance movement and gave public lectures on the topic.daggett was a member of the presbyterian church.he was transferred to the 2nd u.s. infantry regiment on april 17, 1869.he was appointed major in the 13th u.s. infantry regiment on february 2, 1892.he was appointed lieutenant colonel in the 25th u.s. infantry regiment on october 1, 1895.in his military career after the civil war, aaron daggett went on to fight in the indian wars, in which he received a purple heart, the spanish–american war in china, and the philippines and received another purple heart and the gold star.(these quoted ref.do not state awarding of the a-fore referenced medals.data needs to be sourced from national military archives.)during the spanish–american war, daggett was temporarily appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898. | murlock | foetor | interagglutinating | no related information |
an island or isle is a piece of subcontinental land completely surrounded by water.very small islands such as emergent land features on atolls can be called islets, skerries, cays or keys.an island in a river or a lake island may be called an eyot or ait, and a small island off the coast may be called a holm.sedimentary islands in the ganges delta are called chars.a grouping of geographically or geologically related islands, such as the philippines, is referred to as an archipelago.there are two main types of islands in the sea: continental islands and oceanic islands.there are also artificial islands (man-made islands).there are about 900,000 official islands in the world.this number consists of all the officially-reported islands of each country.the total number of islands in the world is unknown.there may be hundreds of thousands of tiny islands that are unknown and uncounted.the number of sea islands in the world is estimated to be more than 200,000.the total area of the world's sea islands is approx.9,963,000 sq km, which is similar to the area of canada and accounts for roughly 1/15 (or 6.7%) of the total land area of earth.dutch eiland ('island'), german eiland ('small island')).however, the spelling of the word was modified in the 15th century because of a false etymology caused by an incorrect association with the etymologically unrelated old french loanword isle, which itself comes from the latin word insula.old english ieg is actually a cognate of swedish ö and german aue, and related to latin aqua (water).continents are often considered to be the largest landmass of a particular continental plate; this holds true for australia, which sits on its own continental lithosphere and tectonic plate (the australian plate).by contrast, islands are usually seen as being extensions of the oceanic crust (e.g.volcanic islands), or as belonging to a continental plate containing a larger landmass (continental islands); the latter is the case of greenland, which sits on the north american plate.examples are borneo, java, sumatra, sakhalin, taiwan and hainan off asia; new guinea, tasmania, and kangaroo island off australia; great britain, ireland, and sicily off europe; greenland, newfoundland, long island, and sable island off north america; and barbados, the falkland islands, and trinidad off south america.examples are madagascar and socotra off africa, new caledonia, new zealand, and some of the seychelles.if this island has a seashore as well as being encircled by two river systems, it becomes what might be called a subcontinental island.the one formed by wollaston lake is very large, about 2,000,000 km2 (770,000 sq mi).this includes: barrier islands, which are accumulations of sand deposited by sea currents on the continental shelves fluvial or alluvial islands formed in river deltas or midstream within large rivers.while some are transitory and may disappear if the volume or speed of the current changes, others are stable and long-lived.other definitions limit the term to only refer to islands with no past geological connections to a continental landmass.the vast majority are volcanic in origin, such as saint helena in the south atlantic ocean.the few oceanic islands that are not volcanic are tectonic in origin and arise where plate movements have lifted up the ocean floor above the surface.examples are the saint peter and saint paul archipelago in the north atlantic ocean and macquarie island in the south pacific ocean.these islands arise from volcanoes where the subduction of one plate under another is occurring.examples are the aleutian islands, the mariana islands, and most of tonga in the pacific ocean. | multivolume | decongesting | overpeer | no related information |
ashgabat international airport (turkmen: aşgabat halkara howa menzili) (iata: asb, icao: utaa), formerly known as saparmyrat türkmenbaşy international airport, is one of five international airports in turkmenistan.it is located within the city limits of ashgabat (ashkhabad).the old airport, with its air traffic control tower and a 3,700-metre-long (12,000 ft) precision approach runway (12l-30r), opened in 1994 and was named after the country's first president, saparmyrat niyazov.the new airport terminal opened in september 2016, after being completely redesigned and rebuilt and after the south runway was moved and lengthened to parallel the north runway.for this route, four-passenger junkers f.13 aircraft were purchased in germany, as well as soviet four-passenger kalinin k-4 aircraft.eight aircraft served this airline.later, in 1932, newer soviet aircraft were purchased for the transport of passengers.the kalinin k-5 aircraft seated six, and the tupolev ant-9 aircraft had twelve seats.with this replenishment of the turkmen ssr air fleet, in 1932 an air division was formed at chardzhou airport that directly served the chardzhou-tashauz route, without stops in other settlements.in soviet times, the airport was used exclusively for servicing flights within the ussr.currently, in addition to the aircraft of the local airline fleet, the airport serves the planes of several foreign airlines of the world, performing both passenger and cargo flights.in soviet times, the airport was used exclusively for domestic flights.as part of saparmurat niyazov's aspiration to transform turkmenistan into 'the new kuwait', he sought to construct a distinctive airport.this zeal resulted in the control tower being constructed on the wrong side of the runway.the 'gaudy new terminal' now blocked the view of air traffic controllers as they guided pilots.the builders warned him of this, however, he responded that, 'it looks better this way.'the building was dismantled in 2013.polimeks, a turkish construction company active in turkmenistan since the late-1990s, was declared winner of the tender.the new airport was opened on 17 september 2016 by president gurbanguly berdimuhamedow.the project cost $2.3 billion (€1.7 billion) and features a highly unusual terminal design in the shape of a falcon.the new airport has capacity to serve 14 million passengers per year at a rate of 1,600 passengers per hour.the airport covers 350,000 m2 and includes a passenger terminal, vip terminal, cargo terminal with capacity to handle 200,000 tonnes of freight per year, a new air traffic control tower (atct), a maintenance hangar for three narrow-body aircraft, new fueling stations, catering, fire brigade, flight simulation, repair and maintenance buildings, parking space for 3,000 cars, a civil aviation school as well as a medical center.the airport has also a second 3,800-meter long runway to serve wide-body, double-deck jet airliners such as the airbus a380 and boeing 747-8.all services of the airport work around the clock.the airport includes passenger waiting rooms, immigration, customs, border control, a 24-hour reference service, vip and cip rooms, a business club, a ticket office for (turkmenistan airlines), shops, bars, fast-food outlets, currency exchange, a new baggage handling conveyor system, international telephone, a mother and child room and the offices for (star alliance air carriers and turkish airlines).on 26 march 2014, a small passenger terminal was opened during a ceremony attended by president gurbanguly berdimuhamedow.the terminal is located on the site of a pre-existing turkmen ssr airport (behind the bus station) on 2013 street (cosmonaut boulevard).for the period of construction of the main passenger terminal the temporary terminal served passengers departing from and arriving to ashgabat.after commissioning of the main terminal, the terminal was used for domestic routes and charter flights. | perciformes | sybaritism | uranometrist <tsp> perciformes | ulmin | lactimide | no related information |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | citydom | plicidentine | wolof <tsp> citydom | presupervised | rosular | no related information |
aaron simon daggett (june 14, 1837 – may 14, 1938) was a career united states army officer.he was the last surviving brevet union general of the american civil war, and the last surviving general of any grade from the war, when he died one month shy of his 101st birthday in 1938.daggett was nominated for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general, to rank from march 13, 1865, by president andrew johnson on february 21, 1866 and was confirmed by the united states senate on april 10, 1866.during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.daggett was a brigadier general of volunteers in the spanish–american war.he was appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898.he was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army (united states) ten days before his retirement from the army on march 2, 1901.he was the son of yankee parents, whose puritan ancestors came to new england as part of the puritan migration from england in 1630.both of daggett's grandfathers served in the revolutionary war.daggett attended bates college (then called the maine state seminary) in lewiston, maine, in 1860.he also attended the monmouth academy and maine wesleyan academy.he was appointed first lieutenant, june 24, 1861.he fought at the first battle of bull run.he was appointed a captain, august 15, 1861.daggett became a major of the 5th maine infantry regiment to rank from april 14, 1863.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864.on january 23, 1865, he was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 5th united states veteran volunteer infantry regiment.he was appointed brevet colonel, march 3, 1865.he had brevet appointments as a major in the regular army for gallant and meritorious services at rappahannock station and as lieutenant colonel for services at the wilderness, both to rank from march 3, 1865.he was again mustered out of the volunteers, may 10, 1865.on february 21, 1866, president andrew johnson nominated daggett for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general of volunteers, to rank from march 13, 1865, and the united states senate confirmed the appointment on april 10, 1866.daggett believed in the abolition of slavery and fought alongside african-american soldiers during the civil war while serving with the 5th maine infantry regiment.he was also a strong supporter of the temperance movement and gave public lectures on the topic.daggett was a member of the presbyterian church.he was transferred to the 2nd u.s. infantry regiment on april 17, 1869.he was appointed major in the 13th u.s. infantry regiment on february 2, 1892.he was appointed lieutenant colonel in the 25th u.s. infantry regiment on october 1, 1895.in his military career after the civil war, aaron daggett went on to fight in the indian wars, in which he received a purple heart, the spanish–american war in china, and the philippines and received another purple heart and the gold star.(these quoted ref.do not state awarding of the a-fore referenced medals.data needs to be sourced from national military archives.)during the spanish–american war, daggett was temporarily appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898. | aaron s daggett | battles | battle of gettysburg | during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864. |
ashgabat international airport (turkmen: aşgabat halkara howa menzili) (iata: asb, icao: utaa), formerly known as saparmyrat türkmenbaşy international airport, is one of five international airports in turkmenistan.it is located within the city limits of ashgabat (ashkhabad).the old airport, with its air traffic control tower and a 3,700-metre-long (12,000 ft) precision approach runway (12l-30r), opened in 1994 and was named after the country's first president, saparmyrat niyazov.the new airport terminal opened in september 2016, after being completely redesigned and rebuilt and after the south runway was moved and lengthened to parallel the north runway.for this route, four-passenger junkers f.13 aircraft were purchased in germany, as well as soviet four-passenger kalinin k-4 aircraft.eight aircraft served this airline.later, in 1932, newer soviet aircraft were purchased for the transport of passengers.the kalinin k-5 aircraft seated six, and the tupolev ant-9 aircraft had twelve seats.with this replenishment of the turkmen ssr air fleet, in 1932 an air division was formed at chardzhou airport that directly served the chardzhou-tashauz route, without stops in other settlements.in soviet times, the airport was used exclusively for servicing flights within the ussr.currently, in addition to the aircraft of the local airline fleet, the airport serves the planes of several foreign airlines of the world, performing both passenger and cargo flights.in soviet times, the airport was used exclusively for domestic flights.as part of saparmurat niyazov's aspiration to transform turkmenistan into 'the new kuwait', he sought to construct a distinctive airport.this zeal resulted in the control tower being constructed on the wrong side of the runway.the 'gaudy new terminal' now blocked the view of air traffic controllers as they guided pilots.the builders warned him of this, however, he responded that, 'it looks better this way.'the building was dismantled in 2013.polimeks, a turkish construction company active in turkmenistan since the late-1990s, was declared winner of the tender.the new airport was opened on 17 september 2016 by president gurbanguly berdimuhamedow.the project cost $2.3 billion (€1.7 billion) and features a highly unusual terminal design in the shape of a falcon.the new airport has capacity to serve 14 million passengers per year at a rate of 1,600 passengers per hour.the airport covers 350,000 m2 and includes a passenger terminal, vip terminal, cargo terminal with capacity to handle 200,000 tonnes of freight per year, a new air traffic control tower (atct), a maintenance hangar for three narrow-body aircraft, new fueling stations, catering, fire brigade, flight simulation, repair and maintenance buildings, parking space for 3,000 cars, a civil aviation school as well as a medical center.the airport has also a second 3,800-meter long runway to serve wide-body, double-deck jet airliners such as the airbus a380 and boeing 747-8.all services of the airport work around the clock.the airport includes passenger waiting rooms, immigration, customs, border control, a 24-hour reference service, vip and cip rooms, a business club, a ticket office for (turkmenistan airlines), shops, bars, fast-food outlets, currency exchange, a new baggage handling conveyor system, international telephone, a mother and child room and the offices for (star alliance air carriers and turkish airlines).on 26 march 2014, a small passenger terminal was opened during a ceremony attended by president gurbanguly berdimuhamedow.the terminal is located on the site of a pre-existing turkmen ssr airport (behind the bus station) on 2013 street (cosmonaut boulevard).for the period of construction of the main passenger terminal the temporary terminal served passengers departing from and arriving to ashgabat.after commissioning of the main terminal, the terminal was used for domestic routes and charter flights. | ashgabat international airport | 3rd runway lengthfeet | 2953 | no related information |
the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press.initially w. e. story was associate editor in charge; he was replaced by thomas craig in 1880.for volume 7 simon newcomb became chief editor with craig managing until 1894.then with volume 16 it was 'edited by thomas craig with the co-operation of simon newcomb' until 1898.other notable mathematicians who have served as editors or editorial associates of the journal include frank morley, oscar zariski, lars ahlfors, hermann weyl, wei-liang chow, s. s. chern, andré weil, harish-chandra, jean dieudonné, henri cartan, stephen smale, jun-ichi igusa, and joseph a. shalika.fields medalist cédric villani has speculated that 'the most famous article in its long history' may be a 1958 paper by john nash, 'continuity of solutions of parabolic and elliptic equations'.according to the journal citation reports, its 2009 impact factor is 1.337, ranking it 22nd out of 255 journals in the category 'mathematics'. | american journal of mathematics | frequency | bimonthly | the american journal of mathematics is a bimonthly mathematics journal published by the johns hopkins university press. |
aaron simon daggett (june 14, 1837 – may 14, 1938) was a career united states army officer.he was the last surviving brevet union general of the american civil war, and the last surviving general of any grade from the war, when he died one month shy of his 101st birthday in 1938.daggett was nominated for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general, to rank from march 13, 1865, by president andrew johnson on february 21, 1866 and was confirmed by the united states senate on april 10, 1866.during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.daggett was a brigadier general of volunteers in the spanish–american war.he was appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898.he was promoted to brigadier general in the regular army (united states) ten days before his retirement from the army on march 2, 1901.he was the son of yankee parents, whose puritan ancestors came to new england as part of the puritan migration from england in 1630.both of daggett's grandfathers served in the revolutionary war.daggett attended bates college (then called the maine state seminary) in lewiston, maine, in 1860.he also attended the monmouth academy and maine wesleyan academy.he was appointed first lieutenant, june 24, 1861.he fought at the first battle of bull run.he was appointed a captain, august 15, 1861.daggett became a major of the 5th maine infantry regiment to rank from april 14, 1863.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864.on january 23, 1865, he was appointed lieutenant colonel of the 5th united states veteran volunteer infantry regiment.he was appointed brevet colonel, march 3, 1865.he had brevet appointments as a major in the regular army for gallant and meritorious services at rappahannock station and as lieutenant colonel for services at the wilderness, both to rank from march 3, 1865.he was again mustered out of the volunteers, may 10, 1865.on february 21, 1866, president andrew johnson nominated daggett for appointment to the grade of brevet brigadier general of volunteers, to rank from march 13, 1865, and the united states senate confirmed the appointment on april 10, 1866.daggett believed in the abolition of slavery and fought alongside african-american soldiers during the civil war while serving with the 5th maine infantry regiment.he was also a strong supporter of the temperance movement and gave public lectures on the topic.daggett was a member of the presbyterian church.he was transferred to the 2nd u.s. infantry regiment on april 17, 1869.he was appointed major in the 13th u.s. infantry regiment on february 2, 1892.he was appointed lieutenant colonel in the 25th u.s. infantry regiment on october 1, 1895.in his military career after the civil war, aaron daggett went on to fight in the indian wars, in which he received a purple heart, the spanish–american war in china, and the philippines and received another purple heart and the gold star.(these quoted ref.do not state awarding of the a-fore referenced medals.data needs to be sourced from national military archives.)during the spanish–american war, daggett was temporarily appointed to the brigadier general grade to rank from september 1, 1898 and was mustered out of the volunteers on november 30, 1898. | aaron s daggett | battles | battle of gettysburg | during the war, daggett fought at west point, gaines' mill, golding's farm, white oak swamp, second bull run, south mountain, antietam, rappahannock station, fredericksburg, battle of gettysburg, battle of mine run, battle of the wilderness and battle of cold harbor.he fought at second fredericksburg, gettysburg, mine run, the wilderness, and cold harbor where he was wounded on may 30, 1864.daggett was mustered out of the volunteers on july 24, 1864. |
Subsets and Splits