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projected-17331894-007
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkey%20national%20under-17%20football%20team
Turkey national under-17 football team
Recent call-ups
The Turkey national under-17 football team is the national under-17 football team of Turkey and is controlled by the Turkish Football Federation. The team competes in the UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship, held every year. The original tournament was called the UEFA European Under-16 Football Championship (1982-2001). The tournament was renamed as the European Under-17 Football Championship in 2002, but importantly the overall statistics are collated from 1982. In addition, every odd year the top teams from the respective UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship compete in the FIFA U-17 World Cup the same year (since 2017, five teams from the respective UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship have been entered).
The following players were called up to the national team within the last twelve months and remain eligble for future call-ups.
[]
[ "Recent call-ups" ]
[ "Turkey national football team", "European national under-17 association football teams" ]
projected-17331894-008
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkey%20national%20under-17%20football%20team
Turkey national under-17 football team
Past squads
The Turkey national under-17 football team is the national under-17 football team of Turkey and is controlled by the Turkish Football Federation. The team competes in the UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship, held every year. The original tournament was called the UEFA European Under-16 Football Championship (1982-2001). The tournament was renamed as the European Under-17 Football Championship in 2002, but importantly the overall statistics are collated from 1982. In addition, every odd year the top teams from the respective UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship compete in the FIFA U-17 World Cup the same year (since 2017, five teams from the respective UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship have been entered).
UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship squads 2004 UEFA European Under-17 Championship squads 2005 UEFA European Under-17 Championship squads 2008 UEFA European Under-17 Championship squads 2009 UEFA European Under-17 Championship squads 2010 UEFA European Under-17 Championship squads 2014 UEFA European Under-17 Championship squads FIFA U-17 World Cup squads 2005 FIFA U-17 World Cup squad 2009 FIFA U-17 World Cup squad 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup squad --->
[]
[ "Past squads" ]
[ "Turkey national football team", "European national under-17 association football teams" ]
projected-17331894-009
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkey%20national%20under-17%20football%20team
Turkey national under-17 football team
See also
The Turkey national under-17 football team is the national under-17 football team of Turkey and is controlled by the Turkish Football Federation. The team competes in the UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship, held every year. The original tournament was called the UEFA European Under-16 Football Championship (1982-2001). The tournament was renamed as the European Under-17 Football Championship in 2002, but importantly the overall statistics are collated from 1982. In addition, every odd year the top teams from the respective UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship compete in the FIFA U-17 World Cup the same year (since 2017, five teams from the respective UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship have been entered).
Turkey national football team Turkey national under-21 football team Turkey national under-20 football team Turkey national under-19 football team Turkey national under-17 football team Turkey national youth football team
[]
[ "See also" ]
[ "Turkey national football team", "European national under-17 association football teams" ]
projected-17331894-010
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkey%20national%20under-17%20football%20team
Turkey national under-17 football team
References
The Turkey national under-17 football team is the national under-17 football team of Turkey and is controlled by the Turkish Football Federation. The team competes in the UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship, held every year. The original tournament was called the UEFA European Under-16 Football Championship (1982-2001). The tournament was renamed as the European Under-17 Football Championship in 2002, but importantly the overall statistics are collated from 1982. In addition, every odd year the top teams from the respective UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship compete in the FIFA U-17 World Cup the same year (since 2017, five teams from the respective UEFA European Under-17 Football Championship have been entered).
under Category:European national under-17 association football teams
[]
[ "References" ]
[ "Turkey national football team", "European national under-17 association football teams" ]
projected-23574921-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tripti%20Nadakar
Tripti Nadakar
Introduction
url=http://biography.lumbinimedia.com/2017/02/tripti-nadakar-biography.html}}</ref>(; born January 2, 1959) is an Indian actress who worked in Nepali cinema. She has performed in more than a dozen Nepali films. Her hit movies were Samjhana, Kusume Rumal, Saino and Lahure''. She and Bhuwan K.C. were dubbed the first golden couple of Nepali film industry. Nadakar was paid Rs. 150,000 to act in ‘Saino’.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Living people", "1969 births", "People from Darjeeling", "Indian Gorkhas", "Indian film actresses", "Nepalese film actresses", "20th-century Indian actresses", "21st-century Indian actresses", "20th-century Nepalese actresses", "21st-century Nepalese actresses" ]
projected-23574921-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tripti%20Nadakar
Tripti Nadakar
Awards
url=http://biography.lumbinimedia.com/2017/02/tripti-nadakar-biography.html}}</ref>(; born January 2, 1959) is an Indian actress who worked in Nepali cinema. She has performed in more than a dozen Nepali films. Her hit movies were Samjhana, Kusume Rumal, Saino and Lahure''. She and Bhuwan K.C. were dubbed the first golden couple of Nepali film industry. Nadakar was paid Rs. 150,000 to act in ‘Saino’.
2007, Best Supporting Actress, Nepali Film Award 2064, Aama Ko Kakh
[]
[ "Awards" ]
[ "Living people", "1969 births", "People from Darjeeling", "Indian Gorkhas", "Indian film actresses", "Nepalese film actresses", "20th-century Indian actresses", "21st-century Indian actresses", "20th-century Nepalese actresses", "21st-century Nepalese actresses" ]
projected-23574921-003
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tripti%20Nadakar
Tripti Nadakar
See also
url=http://biography.lumbinimedia.com/2017/02/tripti-nadakar-biography.html}}</ref>(; born January 2, 1959) is an Indian actress who worked in Nepali cinema. She has performed in more than a dozen Nepali films. Her hit movies were Samjhana, Kusume Rumal, Saino and Lahure''. She and Bhuwan K.C. were dubbed the first golden couple of Nepali film industry. Nadakar was paid Rs. 150,000 to act in ‘Saino’.
saino Kusume Rumal laure (film) Rohit Aryal Rohit Aryal Rohit Aryal
[]
[ "See also" ]
[ "Living people", "1969 births", "People from Darjeeling", "Indian Gorkhas", "Indian film actresses", "Nepalese film actresses", "20th-century Indian actresses", "21st-century Indian actresses", "20th-century Nepalese actresses", "21st-century Nepalese actresses" ]
projected-23574921-004
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tripti%20Nadakar
Tripti Nadakar
References
url=http://biography.lumbinimedia.com/2017/02/tripti-nadakar-biography.html}}</ref>(; born January 2, 1959) is an Indian actress who worked in Nepali cinema. She has performed in more than a dozen Nepali films. Her hit movies were Samjhana, Kusume Rumal, Saino and Lahure''. She and Bhuwan K.C. were dubbed the first golden couple of Nepali film industry. Nadakar was paid Rs. 150,000 to act in ‘Saino’.
Category:Living people Category:1969 births Category:People from Darjeeling Category:Indian Gorkhas Category:Indian film actresses Category:Nepalese film actresses Category:20th-century Indian actresses Category:21st-century Indian actresses Category:20th-century Nepalese actresses Category:21st-century Nepalese actresses
[]
[ "References" ]
[ "Living people", "1969 births", "People from Darjeeling", "Indian Gorkhas", "Indian film actresses", "Nepalese film actresses", "20th-century Indian actresses", "21st-century Indian actresses", "20th-century Nepalese actresses", "21st-century Nepalese actresses" ]
projected-23574924-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California%2C%20Ohio
California, Ohio
Introduction
California, Ohio may refer to: California, Cincinnati, a neighborhood within Cincinnati, Ohio Big Plain, Ohio, originally named California
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[]
projected-23574927-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil%20List%20and%20Secret%20Service%20Money%20Act%201782
Civil List and Secret Service Money Act 1782
Introduction
The Civil List and Secret Service Money Act 1782 (22 Geo. III, c. 82) was an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain. The power over the expenditure in the King's household was transferred to the Treasury, and branches of which were regulated. No pension over £300 was to be granted if the total pension list amounted to over £90,000. Thereafter, no pension was to be above £1,300 unless it was granted to members of the royal family or granted by Parliament. Secret service money employed domestically was similarly limited. A section of the act also abolished the existing Council of Trade and Foreign Plantations which, with the loss of the American War of Independence, had been dismissed earlier by King George III on 2 May 1782.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Great Britain Acts of Parliament 1782" ]
projected-23574927-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil%20List%20and%20Secret%20Service%20Money%20Act%201782
Civil List and Secret Service Money Act 1782
Notes
The Civil List and Secret Service Money Act 1782 (22 Geo. III, c. 82) was an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain. The power over the expenditure in the King's household was transferred to the Treasury, and branches of which were regulated. No pension over £300 was to be granted if the total pension list amounted to over £90,000. Thereafter, no pension was to be above £1,300 unless it was granted to members of the royal family or granted by Parliament. Secret service money employed domestically was similarly limited. A section of the act also abolished the existing Council of Trade and Foreign Plantations which, with the loss of the American War of Independence, had been dismissed earlier by King George III on 2 May 1782.
Category:Great Britain Acts of Parliament 1782
[]
[ "Notes" ]
[ "Great Britain Acts of Parliament 1782" ]
projected-23574939-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Mist%20in%20the%20Mirror
The Mist in the Mirror
Introduction
The Mist in the Mirror: A Ghost Story is a novel by Susan Hill. The novel is about a traveller called Sir James Monmouth and his pursuit of an explorer called Conrad Vane.
[ "TheMistInTheMirror.jpg" ]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Novels by Susan Hill", "Ghost novels", "1992 British novels", "Sinclair-Stevenson books" ]
projected-23574939-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Mist%20in%20the%20Mirror
The Mist in the Mirror
Summary
The Mist in the Mirror: A Ghost Story is a novel by Susan Hill. The novel is about a traveller called Sir James Monmouth and his pursuit of an explorer called Conrad Vane.
Sir James Monmouth has spent most of his life travelling. After the death of his parents, he was raised by his guardian. Later, he arrives in England with the intention of discovering more about himself and his obsession with explorer Conrad Vane. Warned against following his trail, Sir James experiences some extraordinary happenings – who is the mysterious, sad little boy, and the old woman behind the curtain? And why is it that only he hears the chilling scream and the desperate sobbing?
[]
[ "Summary" ]
[ "Novels by Susan Hill", "Ghost novels", "1992 British novels", "Sinclair-Stevenson books" ]
projected-23574939-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Mist%20in%20the%20Mirror
The Mist in the Mirror
Reception
The Mist in the Mirror: A Ghost Story is a novel by Susan Hill. The novel is about a traveller called Sir James Monmouth and his pursuit of an explorer called Conrad Vane.
A 2014 book review by Kirkus Reviews called the novel "a glacially paced adventure" and concluded; "The eponymous mist seems to cloud the writing, and the meandering tale ends quickly with a conclusion that still seems obscure."
[]
[ "Reception" ]
[ "Novels by Susan Hill", "Ghost novels", "1992 British novels", "Sinclair-Stevenson books" ]
projected-23574939-003
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Mist%20in%20the%20Mirror
The Mist in the Mirror
References
The Mist in the Mirror: A Ghost Story is a novel by Susan Hill. The novel is about a traveller called Sir James Monmouth and his pursuit of an explorer called Conrad Vane.
Category:Novels by Susan Hill Category:Ghost novels Category:1992 British novels Category:Sinclair-Stevenson books
[]
[ "References" ]
[ "Novels by Susan Hill", "Ghost novels", "1992 British novels", "Sinclair-Stevenson books" ]
projected-17331964-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lajos%20Kozma
Lajos Kozma
Introduction
Lajos Kozma (1938–2007) was a Hungarian operatic tenor, particularly associated with lyric Italian roles, baroque operas and oratorios. Born on 2 September 1938 in Lepsény, Hungary, he studied at the Franz Liszt Academy in Budapest, and made his debut at the Budapest Opera in 1961 (as Malcolm), where he won considerable acclaim as Pelléas in Debussy's Pelléas et Mélisande. In 1963, he went to Italy to further his studies at the Accademia di Santa Cecilia in Rome, with Giorgio Favaretto and Franco Capuana. Beginning in 1964, he sang widely in Italy, appearing in Bologna, Venice, Florence, Trieste, Palermo, at the Rome Opera, at La Scala in Milan, and the San Carlo in Naples. His career quickly became international with guest appearances at the Vienna State Opera, the Royal Opera House in London, La Monnaie in Brussels, Amsterdam, Copenhagen, and Philadelphia. He also appeared at the Salzburg Festival and Aix-en-Provence Festival, notably as Ferrando in Così fan tutte. Other notable roles included Monteverdi's L'Orfeo (recorded with Nikolaus Harnoncourt), Vivaldi's Orlando furioso, and Stravinsky's Oedipus Rex. In addition, he created Renzo Rossellini's La Reine morte, at the Monte Carlo Opera in 1973. In 1971, he appeared in a film version of Lucia di Lammermoor, opposite Anna Moffo, which has been released on DVD. He died on 30 December 2007 in Pierantonio (Umbertide), Italy.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "1938 births", "2007 deaths", "Hungarian operatic tenors", "Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia alumni", "20th-century Hungarian male opera singers" ]
projected-17331964-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lajos%20Kozma
Lajos Kozma
Sources
Lajos Kozma (1938–2007) was a Hungarian operatic tenor, particularly associated with lyric Italian roles, baroque operas and oratorios. Born on 2 September 1938 in Lepsény, Hungary, he studied at the Franz Liszt Academy in Budapest, and made his debut at the Budapest Opera in 1961 (as Malcolm), where he won considerable acclaim as Pelléas in Debussy's Pelléas et Mélisande. In 1963, he went to Italy to further his studies at the Accademia di Santa Cecilia in Rome, with Giorgio Favaretto and Franco Capuana. Beginning in 1964, he sang widely in Italy, appearing in Bologna, Venice, Florence, Trieste, Palermo, at the Rome Opera, at La Scala in Milan, and the San Carlo in Naples. His career quickly became international with guest appearances at the Vienna State Opera, the Royal Opera House in London, La Monnaie in Brussels, Amsterdam, Copenhagen, and Philadelphia. He also appeared at the Salzburg Festival and Aix-en-Provence Festival, notably as Ferrando in Così fan tutte. Other notable roles included Monteverdi's L'Orfeo (recorded with Nikolaus Harnoncourt), Vivaldi's Orlando furioso, and Stravinsky's Oedipus Rex. In addition, he created Renzo Rossellini's La Reine morte, at the Monte Carlo Opera in 1973. In 1971, he appeared in a film version of Lucia di Lammermoor, opposite Anna Moffo, which has been released on DVD. He died on 30 December 2007 in Pierantonio (Umbertide), Italy.
Operissimo.com Category:1938 births Category:2007 deaths Category:Hungarian operatic tenors Category:Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia alumni Category:20th-century Hungarian male opera singers
[]
[ "Sources" ]
[ "1938 births", "2007 deaths", "Hungarian operatic tenors", "Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia alumni", "20th-century Hungarian male opera singers" ]
projected-26722859-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tortilla%20Army
Tortilla Army
Introduction
Tortilla Army is a British grunge metal band that was formed by singer/guitarist Jim Noble and bassist Sy Morton in Whitstable, Kent in 1998. Tortilla Army went through a succession of members until establishing the four current members, being mainstays Jim Noble and Sy Morton. Drummer Mik Gaffney joined the band in 2003 and lead guitarist Joe Coomes joined the band in 2006.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "English heavy metal musical groups", "Grunge musical groups", "Musical groups established in 1998" ]
projected-26722859-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tortilla%20Army
Tortilla Army
History
Tortilla Army is a British grunge metal band that was formed by singer/guitarist Jim Noble and bassist Sy Morton in Whitstable, Kent in 1998. Tortilla Army went through a succession of members until establishing the four current members, being mainstays Jim Noble and Sy Morton. Drummer Mik Gaffney joined the band in 2003 and lead guitarist Joe Coomes joined the band in 2006.
The band established itself as part of the pub/club music scene in Kent, drawing inspiration from 90's grunge bands like Nirvana, Pearl Jam and Alice in Chains among others. The original line-up consisting of singer/guitarist Jim Noble, bassist Sy Morton, drummer Chris Jones and percussionist Colin Lovatt honed their sound with hours of practice, adding the unique (at the time) element of live percussion to their sound and live shows. They released their debut album entitled A New Journey independently in 2002. Drummers come and drummers go, and that's exactly what happened in 2003. Out went founder member Chris Jones in comes Mik Gaffney. Mik immediately put his stamp on the band's sound and style (in fact one of their first song writing sessions yielded fans favorite "Broken"). The new four-piece continued to develop their sound until Colin Lovatt decided to quit the band to continue his life in Australia. Colin has since returned to the UK, and is playing percussion for Get Ape. So Tortilla Army reverted to a trio format, something all three members were comfortable with. After some interest from minor record companies Tortilla Army unexpectedly chose to remain unsigned. Tortilla Army found unexpected local success with "Broken", the band's lead track from their second album of the same name, 2004's Broken. It wasn't until during a string of dates with U.S. act Moth (where they acquired the use of Moth's touring guitarist for a show) did the band feel that a little extra depth was needed. A second guitarist was added in shape of Joe Coomes, the band finally had the perfect line up. Never before did Tortilla Army have such a full sound and the right balance of the right people. Subsequently, Tortilla Army began a small nationwide tour with Swedish heavy metal/hard rock band Freak Kitchen in 2006 bringing along their grunge sound with great live performances. After four years Tortilla Army released their much anticipated third album 2008's Finally. The album was the first to feature recordings from guitarist Joe Coomes whose input included shredding riffs and blistering guitar solos on top of the seasoned tightness of the original trio of Jim Noble, Sy Morton and Mik Gaffney. This seemed that Tortilla Army were onto a winner with their new direction in sound. Tortilla Army has come a very long way from the initial steps in the backroom of the East Kent public house in Whitstable, Kent (spiritual home) to where they are now, and things continue to move forward. With the release of their new EP One for the Living in April 2010, an ever increasing presence on Facebook, Twitter and Myspace, dates with U.S. band's Moth & Fizzgig and upcoming tours with the Mighty Freak Kitchen in 2010 being put together as we speak, the band are going from strength to strength striding forward. In Feb 2013, it was decided that it was time to call time on Tortilla Army. The band played their last ever gig on Friday 10 May 2013 to a packed Earls in Maidstone. Mik is concentrating on his role in Oi!/punk legends The Last Resort (who just released their latest album 'This Is My England' on Randale Records), whilst Sy has joined Kelly's Heroes on a full-time basis. Sy, Jim and Mik still get together to play random gigs when schedules allow. Jim & Joe also have put together a new act called NE Fingoes, together with drums from the Fool Fighters' Tony Chapman, this new outfit takes pop songs and re covers them in Rock goo!
[]
[ "History" ]
[ "English heavy metal musical groups", "Grunge musical groups", "Musical groups established in 1998" ]
projected-26722859-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tortilla%20Army
Tortilla Army
Style and influences
Tortilla Army is a British grunge metal band that was formed by singer/guitarist Jim Noble and bassist Sy Morton in Whitstable, Kent in 1998. Tortilla Army went through a succession of members until establishing the four current members, being mainstays Jim Noble and Sy Morton. Drummer Mik Gaffney joined the band in 2003 and lead guitarist Joe Coomes joined the band in 2006.
Tortilla Army's music has been described by fans and critics as grunge metal. The band has cited being influenced by bands such as Kings X, Nirvana and Pantera. These bands inspire Tortilla Army's "catchy vocals, aggressive riffs and melodies" according to band member Sy Morton. The band themselves consider their music as genre free, with Morton going on to state that "We’re simply a rock band with grunge and metal influences, and I’ve said that from Day One". Tortilla Army have been praised in the local press for the band's efforts in their synchronised and melodic song structures. When asked on their views on their looks, members of the band have stated that they would not change their sound or image for a commercial approach; Mortan commented that, "We're more interested in what our music sounds like and entertaining the local crowds than selling out or selling our fans short".
[]
[ "Style and influences" ]
[ "English heavy metal musical groups", "Grunge musical groups", "Musical groups established in 1998" ]
projected-26722859-004
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tortilla%20Army
Tortilla Army
Current members
Tortilla Army is a British grunge metal band that was formed by singer/guitarist Jim Noble and bassist Sy Morton in Whitstable, Kent in 1998. Tortilla Army went through a succession of members until establishing the four current members, being mainstays Jim Noble and Sy Morton. Drummer Mik Gaffney joined the band in 2003 and lead guitarist Joe Coomes joined the band in 2006.
Jim Noble – Lead Vocals and Guitar (1998–2013 Sy Morton – Bass and Vocals (1998–2013 Mik Gaffney – Drums (2003–2013 Joe Websper – Lead Guitar (2006–2013
[]
[ "Members", "Current members" ]
[ "English heavy metal musical groups", "Grunge musical groups", "Musical groups established in 1998" ]
projected-26722859-005
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tortilla%20Army
Tortilla Army
Previous members
Tortilla Army is a British grunge metal band that was formed by singer/guitarist Jim Noble and bassist Sy Morton in Whitstable, Kent in 1998. Tortilla Army went through a succession of members until establishing the four current members, being mainstays Jim Noble and Sy Morton. Drummer Mik Gaffney joined the band in 2003 and lead guitarist Joe Coomes joined the band in 2006.
Chris Jones – Drums (1998–2003) Colin Lovatt – Percussion (1999–2004) Martin Wisbey – Lead Guitar (2005–2006)
[]
[ "Members", "Previous members" ]
[ "English heavy metal musical groups", "Grunge musical groups", "Musical groups established in 1998" ]
projected-26722859-008
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tortilla%20Army
Tortilla Army
Studio albums
Tortilla Army is a British grunge metal band that was formed by singer/guitarist Jim Noble and bassist Sy Morton in Whitstable, Kent in 1998. Tortilla Army went through a succession of members until establishing the four current members, being mainstays Jim Noble and Sy Morton. Drummer Mik Gaffney joined the band in 2003 and lead guitarist Joe Coomes joined the band in 2006.
A New Journey (Independent Release, 2002) Broken (Independent Release, 2004) Live From The Muddy Banks Of The Medway (Independent release 2005) Finally (Independent Release, 2008) One For The Living (Independent Release, 2010)
[]
[ "Discography", "Studio albums" ]
[ "English heavy metal musical groups", "Grunge musical groups", "Musical groups established in 1998" ]
projected-26722859-009
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tortilla%20Army
Tortilla Army
Compilation albums
Tortilla Army is a British grunge metal band that was formed by singer/guitarist Jim Noble and bassist Sy Morton in Whitstable, Kent in 1998. Tortilla Army went through a succession of members until establishing the four current members, being mainstays Jim Noble and Sy Morton. Drummer Mik Gaffney joined the band in 2003 and lead guitarist Joe Coomes joined the band in 2006.
Archive (Independent Release, 2005)
[]
[ "Discography", "Compilation albums" ]
[ "English heavy metal musical groups", "Grunge musical groups", "Musical groups established in 1998" ]
projected-17331978-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stuart%20Wilson%20%28footballer%29
Stuart Wilson (footballer)
Introduction
Stuart Wilson (born 16 September 1977) is an English former football midfielder and former coach of Long Eaton Ladies FC.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "1977 births", "Living people", "English footballers", "Association football midfielders", "Premier League players", "Leicester City F.C. players", "Sheffield United F.C. players", "Cambridge United F.C. players", "Cambridge City F.C. players", "Anstey Nomads F.C. players", "Shepshed Dynamo F.C....
projected-26722863-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cecilia%20Nilsson%20%28athlete%29
Cecilia Nilsson (athlete)
Introduction
Cecilia Nilsson (born 22 June 1979) is a retired female hammer thrower from Sweden. She set her personal best (69.09 metres) on 24 May 2008 at a meet in Halle, Saxony-Anhalt.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "1979 births", "Living people", "Swedish female hammer throwers" ]
projected-26722863-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cecilia%20Nilsson%20%28athlete%29
Cecilia Nilsson (athlete)
References
Cecilia Nilsson (born 22 June 1979) is a retired female hammer thrower from Sweden. She set her personal best (69.09 metres) on 24 May 2008 at a meet in Halle, Saxony-Anhalt.
Category:1979 births Category:Living people Category:Swedish female hammer throwers
[]
[ "References" ]
[ "1979 births", "Living people", "Swedish female hammer throwers" ]
projected-17331985-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WMUP
WMUP
Introduction
WMUP (99.9 FM) was a radio station formerly licensed to Carney, Michigan. The station was owned by Starboard Media Foundation, Inc. and was granted its license on April 15, 2008. The station's license was cancelled and its call sign deleted by the Federal Communications Commission on February 1, 2012.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Radio stations in Michigan", "Radio stations disestablished in 2012", "Defunct radio stations in the United States", "Radio stations established in 2008", "Defunct religious radio stations in the United States", "2008 establishments in Michigan", "2012 disestablishments in Michigan", "Defunct mass me...
projected-17331985-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WMUP
WMUP
Sources
WMUP (99.9 FM) was a radio station formerly licensed to Carney, Michigan. The station was owned by Starboard Media Foundation, Inc. and was granted its license on April 15, 2008. The station's license was cancelled and its call sign deleted by the Federal Communications Commission on February 1, 2012.
Michiguide.com - WMUP History
[]
[ "Sources" ]
[ "Radio stations in Michigan", "Radio stations disestablished in 2012", "Defunct radio stations in the United States", "Radio stations established in 2008", "Defunct religious radio stations in the United States", "2008 establishments in Michigan", "2012 disestablishments in Michigan", "Defunct mass me...
projected-26722913-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical%20instrument
Mathematical instrument
Introduction
A mathematical instrument is a tool or device used in the study or practice of mathematics. In geometry, construction of various proofs was done using only a compass and straightedge; arguments in these proofs relied only on idealized properties of these instruments and literal construction was regarded as only an approximation. In applied mathematics, mathematical instruments were used for measuring angles and distances, in astronomy, navigation, surveying and in the measurement of time.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Mathematical tools", "Articles containing video clips" ]
projected-26722913-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical%20instrument
Mathematical instrument
Overview
A mathematical instrument is a tool or device used in the study or practice of mathematics. In geometry, construction of various proofs was done using only a compass and straightedge; arguments in these proofs relied only on idealized properties of these instruments and literal construction was regarded as only an approximation. In applied mathematics, mathematical instruments were used for measuring angles and distances, in astronomy, navigation, surveying and in the measurement of time.
Instruments such as the astrolabe, the quadrant, and others were used to measure and accurately record the relative positions and movements of planets and other celestial objects. The sextant and other related instruments were essential for navigation at sea. Most instruments are used within the field of geometry, including the ruler, dividers, protractor, set square, compass, ellipsograph, T-square and opisometer. Others are used in arithmetic (for example the abacus, slide rule and calculator) or in algebra (the integraph). In astronomy, many have said the pyramids (along with Stonehenge) were actually instruments used for tracking the stars over long periods or for the annual planting seasons.
[ "Astrolabe PSF.svg" ]
[ "Overview" ]
[ "Mathematical tools", "Articles containing video clips" ]
projected-26722913-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical%20instrument
Mathematical instrument
In schools
A mathematical instrument is a tool or device used in the study or practice of mathematics. In geometry, construction of various proofs was done using only a compass and straightedge; arguments in these proofs relied only on idealized properties of these instruments and literal construction was regarded as only an approximation. In applied mathematics, mathematical instruments were used for measuring angles and distances, in astronomy, navigation, surveying and in the measurement of time.
The Oxford Set of Mathematical Instruments is a set of instruments used by generations of school children in the United Kingdom and around the world in mathematics and geometry lessons. It includes two set squares, a 180° protractor, a 15 cm ruler, a metal compass, a 9 cm pencil, a pencil sharpener, an eraser and a 10mm stencil.
[]
[ "In schools" ]
[ "Mathematical tools", "Articles containing video clips" ]
projected-26722913-003
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical%20instrument
Mathematical instrument
See also
A mathematical instrument is a tool or device used in the study or practice of mathematics. In geometry, construction of various proofs was done using only a compass and straightedge; arguments in these proofs relied only on idealized properties of these instruments and literal construction was regarded as only an approximation. In applied mathematics, mathematical instruments were used for measuring angles and distances, in astronomy, navigation, surveying and in the measurement of time.
The Construction and Principal Uses of Mathematical Instruments Dividing engine Measuring instrument Planimeter Integraph
[]
[ "See also" ]
[ "Mathematical tools", "Articles containing video clips" ]
projected-26722913-005
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical%20instrument
Mathematical instrument
External reading
A mathematical instrument is a tool or device used in the study or practice of mathematics. In geometry, construction of various proofs was done using only a compass and straightedge; arguments in these proofs relied only on idealized properties of these instruments and literal construction was regarded as only an approximation. In applied mathematics, mathematical instruments were used for measuring angles and distances, in astronomy, navigation, surveying and in the measurement of time.
J. L. Heilbron (ed.), The Oxford Companion To the History of Modern Science (Oxford University Press, 2003) , Instruments and Instrument Making, pp. 408–411 Category:Mathematical tools Category:Articles containing video clips
[]
[ "External reading" ]
[ "Mathematical tools", "Articles containing video clips" ]
projected-23574940-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joy%20%28given%20name%29
Joy (given name)
Introduction
Joy is a common unisex given name meaning joy, happiness, joyful. A common variant of the name is the female given name Joyce (name).
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "English feminine given names", "Feminine given names", "Virtue names" ]
projected-23574940-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joy%20%28given%20name%29
Joy (given name)
People with the given name Joy
Joy is a common unisex given name meaning joy, happiness, joyful. A common variant of the name is the female given name Joyce (name).
Joy (singer) (born 1996), South Korean singer and member of Red Velvet (group) Joy Adamson (1910–1980), wildlife rehabilitator and author Joy Banerjee (born 1963), Bengali cinema actor Joy Behar (born 1942), American comedian and actress Joy Bokiri (born 1998), Nigerian women's footballer Joy Bryant (born 1974), American actress Joy Browne (born 1944), American radio psychologist Joy Burke (born 1990), Taiwanese-American women's basketball player Joy Carroll Vicar who inspired The Vicar of Dibley Joy Crookes (born 1998), British singer-songwriter Joy Davidman (1915–1960), American writer and wife of C. S. Lewis Joy Destiny Tobing (born 1980), Indonesian gospel singer Joy Enriquez (born 1978), American singer and actress Joy Fawcett (born 1968), American soccer player Joy Fleming (1944–2017), German singer Defne Joy Foster (1975–2011), Turkish actress, presenter, VJ Joy Garnett (born 1965) Canadian-American artist Joy Giovanni (born 1978), American actress, model, wrestler, and WWE Diva Joy Grieveson (born 1941), British track and field athlete Joy Paul Guilford (1897-1987), American psychologist Joy Harjo (born 1951), American poet Joy Kere diplomat from the Solomon Islands Joy Kogawa (born 1935), Canadian poet and novelist Joy Lauren (born 1989), American actress Joy Lofthouse (1923–2017), British WW2 pilot Joy Mangano (born 1956), American inventor, and businesswoman Joy Marshall (1867–1903), New Zealand clergyman, teacher, tennis player, cricketer, and rugby footballer Joy Morris (born 1970), Canadian mathematician Joy Morton (1855–1934), American businessman and conservationist Joy Mukherjee (1939–2012), Indian film actor and director Joy Ogwu (born 1946), Nigerian diplomat Joy Oladokun, American singer-songwriter Joy Padgett (born 1947), American politician Joy Powell (born 1962),American activist Joy Quigley (born 1948), New Zealand politician Joy Reid (born 1968), American cable television host with the full name Joy-Ann M. Lomena-Reid Joy San Buenaventura (born 1959), Filipino-born American politician Joy Sarkar, Bengali music director Joy A. Thomas (1963-2020), American Indian-born informational theorist and scientist Joy Smith (born 1947), Canadian politician Joy Williams (singer) (born 1982), American pop singer Joy Williams (Australian writer) (1942–2006), Australian poet Joy Williams (American writer) (born 1944), American author Joy Wolfram (born 1989), Finnish nanoscientist. Joy Cherian (born 1944), Commissioner at the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Joy Sengupta (born 1968), Indian film and stage actor
[]
[ "People with the given name Joy" ]
[ "English feminine given names", "Feminine given names", "Virtue names" ]
projected-23574940-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joy%20%28given%20name%29
Joy (given name)
Fictional characters
Joy is a common unisex given name meaning joy, happiness, joyful. A common variant of the name is the female given name Joyce (name).
Joy, one of Riley Andersen's emotions and the main protagonist of Disney Pixar's Inside Out. Nurse Joy, a nurse from the Pokémon TV series. Joy Wang, the daughter in Everything Everywhere All at Once (2022 film). Played by Stephanie Hsu.
[]
[ "Fictional characters" ]
[ "English feminine given names", "Feminine given names", "Virtue names" ]
projected-23574940-003
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joy%20%28given%20name%29
Joy (given name)
See also
Joy is a common unisex given name meaning joy, happiness, joyful. A common variant of the name is the female given name Joyce (name).
Gioia (disambiguation), the Italian version of the name Joie, the French version of the name Category:English feminine given names Category:Feminine given names Category:Virtue names
[]
[ "See also" ]
[ "English feminine given names", "Feminine given names", "Virtue names" ]
projected-26722930-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summerlovers
Summerlovers
Introduction
"Summerlovers" is the twelfth single released by the Italian singer Alexia released in 2001 and the second and final single from her fourth studio album Mad For Music. The track featured on the Collections budget compilation released by Sony Music in 2009.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "2001 singles", "Alexia (Italian singer) songs", "Songs written by Alexia (Italian singer)", "Songs written by Massimo Marcolini", "Sony Music singles", "2001 songs" ]
projected-26722930-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summerlovers
Summerlovers
Release
"Summerlovers" is the twelfth single released by the Italian singer Alexia released in 2001 and the second and final single from her fourth studio album Mad For Music. The track featured on the Collections budget compilation released by Sony Music in 2009.
The track was released in Italy on CD and 12" (Sony Code 671784) on October 28, 2001. Remixes were done by Vanni G and Pier Di Stolfo under the alias Superdj. The Italian Wikipedia page lists Summerlovers as being a radio promo CD only, despite it being released in Italy. No video was filmed for the single.
[]
[ "Release" ]
[ "2001 singles", "Alexia (Italian singer) songs", "Songs written by Alexia (Italian singer)", "Songs written by Massimo Marcolini", "Sony Music singles", "2001 songs" ]
projected-26722930-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summerlovers
Summerlovers
Official versions
"Summerlovers" is the twelfth single released by the Italian singer Alexia released in 2001 and the second and final single from her fourth studio album Mad For Music. The track featured on the Collections budget compilation released by Sony Music in 2009.
Album Version 3:31 Superdj Rmx Radio 3:24 Superdj Rmx Extended 4:24
[]
[ "Official versions" ]
[ "2001 singles", "Alexia (Italian singer) songs", "Songs written by Alexia (Italian singer)", "Songs written by Massimo Marcolini", "Sony Music singles", "2001 songs" ]
projected-26722930-003
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summerlovers
Summerlovers
References
"Summerlovers" is the twelfth single released by the Italian singer Alexia released in 2001 and the second and final single from her fourth studio album Mad For Music. The track featured on the Collections budget compilation released by Sony Music in 2009.
Category:2001 singles Category:Alexia (Italian singer) songs Category:Songs written by Alexia (Italian singer) Category:Songs written by Massimo Marcolini Category:Sony Music singles Category:2001 songs
[]
[ "References" ]
[ "2001 singles", "Alexia (Italian singer) songs", "Songs written by Alexia (Italian singer)", "Songs written by Massimo Marcolini", "Sony Music singles", "2001 songs" ]
projected-17332008-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yushania%20alpina
Yushania alpina
Introduction
Oldeania alpina, the African alpine bamboo, is a perennial bamboo of the family Poaceae and the genus Yushania It can be found growing in dense but not large stands on the mountains and volcanoes surrounding the East African Rift between the altitudes of 2,500 meters (8,200 feet) and 3,300 meters (11,000 feet).
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Afromontane flora", "Bambusoideae", "Flora of Northeast Tropical Africa", "Flora of East Tropical Africa", "Flora of West-Central Tropical Africa", "Flora of South Tropical Africa", "Plants described in 1974" ]
projected-17332008-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yushania%20alpina
Yushania alpina
Description
Oldeania alpina, the African alpine bamboo, is a perennial bamboo of the family Poaceae and the genus Yushania It can be found growing in dense but not large stands on the mountains and volcanoes surrounding the East African Rift between the altitudes of 2,500 meters (8,200 feet) and 3,300 meters (11,000 feet).
Stems and leaves 200 – 1,950 centimeters (6 – 64 feet) tall and 5 – 12.5 centimeters (2 – 5 inches) in diameter; these grass stems get used as fencing, plumbing and other building materials. Culm sheaths (tubular coverings) are hairless or with red bristles. Leaf sheath is covered with bristles. Leaf blades are "deciduous at the ligule"; blades 5 – 20 centimeters (2 – 8 inches) long. Flowers Branched cluster of flowers in solitary spikes, which can be dense or loose and are 5–15 centimeters (2–6 inches) long. Roots Short rhizomes described as pachymorph (a term which is recommended for describing rhizomes which are sympodial or superposed in such a way as to imitate a simple axis, but the word pachymorph would not be used for describing branches or in the case of bamboos, culms).
[]
[ "Description" ]
[ "Afromontane flora", "Bambusoideae", "Flora of Northeast Tropical Africa", "Flora of East Tropical Africa", "Flora of West-Central Tropical Africa", "Flora of South Tropical Africa", "Plants described in 1974" ]
projected-17332008-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yushania%20alpina
Yushania alpina
Distribution
Oldeania alpina, the African alpine bamboo, is a perennial bamboo of the family Poaceae and the genus Yushania It can be found growing in dense but not large stands on the mountains and volcanoes surrounding the East African Rift between the altitudes of 2,500 meters (8,200 feet) and 3,300 meters (11,000 feet).
Afrotropical realm: Northeast Tropical Africa: Ethiopia, Sudan East Tropical Africa: Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda West-Central Tropical Africa: Burundi, Cameroon, Congo, Rwanda, DR Congo South Tropical Africa: Malawi, Zambia
[]
[ "Distribution" ]
[ "Afromontane flora", "Bambusoideae", "Flora of Northeast Tropical Africa", "Flora of East Tropical Africa", "Flora of West-Central Tropical Africa", "Flora of South Tropical Africa", "Plants described in 1974" ]
projected-17332008-003
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yushania%20alpina
Yushania alpina
References
Oldeania alpina, the African alpine bamboo, is a perennial bamboo of the family Poaceae and the genus Yushania It can be found growing in dense but not large stands on the mountains and volcanoes surrounding the East African Rift between the altitudes of 2,500 meters (8,200 feet) and 3,300 meters (11,000 feet).
Category:Afromontane flora Category:Bambusoideae Category:Flora of Northeast Tropical Africa Category:Flora of East Tropical Africa Category:Flora of West-Central Tropical Africa Category:Flora of South Tropical Africa Category:Plants described in 1974
[]
[ "References" ]
[ "Afromontane flora", "Bambusoideae", "Flora of Northeast Tropical Africa", "Flora of East Tropical Africa", "Flora of West-Central Tropical Africa", "Flora of South Tropical Africa", "Plants described in 1974" ]
projected-23574953-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francisco%20Massinga
Francisco Massinga
Introduction
Francisco Massinga (born 6 May 1986), better known as Whiskey, is a Mozambican football defender.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "1986 births", "Living people", "Mozambican footballers", "Mozambique international footballers", "Association football defenders", "C.D. Maxaquene players", "Clube Ferroviário de Maputo footballers", "2010 Africa Cup of Nations players" ]
projected-23574953-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francisco%20Massinga
Francisco Massinga
International goals
Francisco Massinga (born 6 May 1986), better known as Whiskey, is a Mozambican football defender.
Scores and results list Mozambique's goal tally first.
[]
[ "International career", "International goals" ]
[ "1986 births", "Living people", "Mozambican footballers", "Mozambique international footballers", "Association football defenders", "C.D. Maxaquene players", "Clube Ferroviário de Maputo footballers", "2010 Africa Cup of Nations players" ]
projected-56567322-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huang%20Yu-ting
Huang Yu-ting
Introduction
Huang Yu-ting (; ) is a Taiwanese speed skater who has competed in inline speed skating, short track speed skating, and long track speed skating. She was the flagbearer for the 'Chinese Taipei' team at the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games' opening ceremony. As an inline speed skater, Huang won three gold medals at the 2009 World Games in Kaohsiung, Republic of China (Taiwan) representing the Chinese Taipei team: 300 m time trial, 500 m sprint, and 1000 m sprint. At the 2010 Asian Games, she competed in the women's 300 metres time trial and 500 metres sprint events. She won two medals at the 2013 World Games in Cali, Colombia: a gold in the 1000 m sprint and a bronze in the 500 m sprint. In short track speed skating at the 2007 Asian Winter Games, Huang competed in the women's 500 metres, 1000 metres, 1500 metres, and 3000 metres relay events. Huang competed as a long track speed skater at the 2018 Winter Olympics, in the women's 500 metres, 1000 metres, and 1500 metres events.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "1988 births", "Living people", "Taiwanese female speed skaters", "Taiwanese female short track speed skaters", "Inline speed skaters", "Olympic speed skaters of Taiwan", "Speed skaters at the 2018 Winter Olympics", "Speed skaters at the 2022 Winter Olympics", "Asian Games medalists in roller sports...
projected-56567322-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huang%20Yu-ting
Huang Yu-ting
Controversy
Huang Yu-ting (; ) is a Taiwanese speed skater who has competed in inline speed skating, short track speed skating, and long track speed skating. She was the flagbearer for the 'Chinese Taipei' team at the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games' opening ceremony. As an inline speed skater, Huang won three gold medals at the 2009 World Games in Kaohsiung, Republic of China (Taiwan) representing the Chinese Taipei team: 300 m time trial, 500 m sprint, and 1000 m sprint. At the 2010 Asian Games, she competed in the women's 300 metres time trial and 500 metres sprint events. She won two medals at the 2013 World Games in Cali, Colombia: a gold in the 1000 m sprint and a bronze in the 500 m sprint. In short track speed skating at the 2007 Asian Winter Games, Huang competed in the women's 500 metres, 1000 metres, 1500 metres, and 3000 metres relay events. Huang competed as a long track speed skater at the 2018 Winter Olympics, in the women's 500 metres, 1000 metres, and 1500 metres events.
In early 2022, Huang garnered much controversy after a video that she posted on 23 January, went viral of her wearing an outfit labeled "China" during practice, and she was later criticised heavily by Taiwanese netizens, especially those with pan-green political views, who had flooded her Facebook and Instagram account with hate comments. In response, Huang claimed on Instagram that the outfit was a gift from an athlete who was on the Chinese team, whom she befriended in Germany. She also posted a Taylor Swift music video, "Shake It Off," which is famed for its lyrics, "Haters gonna hate, hate, hate, hate," and she wrote alongside the video, "My dear haters, this song is for you." Huang later removed the video post due to the social media backlash that came afterwards. According to a translation by the South China Morning Post, Huang separately made a post on Facebook where she wrote, "Thank you to everyone who cheered me up...I have removed the video due to too many unnecessary private messages!..."Sport is sport and in the world of sports, we do not differentiate between nationalities. After the Games, we all are good friends." Ho Chih-wei, a Legislative Yuan member of the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) criticised Huang Yu-ting, calling her "brainless" and demanding that she "shut up", as well as supporting a law that would punish athletes such as Huang with bans from sport events. Taiwan Premier Su Tseng-chang from the ruling DPP called for an investigation and punishment for Huang. On 3 March 2022, the Sports Administration announced that it would suspend Huang's subsidies for training and competition for a two-year period.
[]
[ "Controversy" ]
[ "1988 births", "Living people", "Taiwanese female speed skaters", "Taiwanese female short track speed skaters", "Inline speed skaters", "Olympic speed skaters of Taiwan", "Speed skaters at the 2018 Winter Olympics", "Speed skaters at the 2022 Winter Olympics", "Asian Games medalists in roller sports...
projected-23574969-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twin%20Research%20and%20Human%20Genetics
Twin Research and Human Genetics
Introduction
Twin Research and Human Genetics is a peer-reviewed scientific journal published bimonthly by the Cambridge University Press. It is the official journal of the International Society for Twin Studies (ISTS) and the Human Genetics Society of Australasia. The journal covers research on the biology and epidemiology of twinning as well as biomedical and behavioral twin- and molecular-genetic research. According to the Journal Citation Reports, it has a 2018 impact factor of 1.159. The journal was established in 1998 and has been edited by Robert Derom (1998–1999), and Nick Martin (2000–present). The title is a translation of Acta Geneticae Medicae et Gemellologiae, from 1952 until 1978 the official organ of the Permanent Committee for the International Congresses of Human Genetics and Società italiana di genetica medica, the original title of the first journal of the ISTS.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Behavioural genetics journals", "Bimonthly journals", "Cambridge University Press academic journals", "Delayed open access journals", "English-language journals", "Genetics in the United Kingdom", "Psychiatry journals", "Publications established in 1998", "Twin studies" ]
projected-56567329-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitromorpha%20suarezi
Mitromorpha suarezi
Introduction
Mitromorpha suarezi is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Mitromorphidae.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Mitromorpha", "Invertebrates of São Tomé and Príncipe", "Fauna of Príncipe", "Gastropods described in 2012" ]
projected-56567329-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitromorpha%20suarezi
Mitromorpha suarezi
Description
Mitromorpha suarezi is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Mitromorphidae.
The length of the shell attains 4.7 mm.
[]
[ "Description" ]
[ "Mitromorpha", "Invertebrates of São Tomé and Príncipe", "Fauna of Príncipe", "Gastropods described in 2012" ]
projected-56567329-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitromorpha%20suarezi
Mitromorpha suarezi
Distribution
Mitromorpha suarezi is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Mitromorphidae.
This marine species occurs off the island Príncipe, Gulf of Guinea.
[]
[ "Distribution" ]
[ "Mitromorpha", "Invertebrates of São Tomé and Príncipe", "Fauna of Príncipe", "Gastropods described in 2012" ]
projected-56567329-003
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitromorpha%20suarezi
Mitromorpha suarezi
References
Mitromorpha suarezi is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Mitromorphidae.
Rolàn, E. & Gori, S., 2012. New species of neogastropods from the islands of the Gulf of Guinea, West Africa. Iberus 30(1): 53–66
[]
[ "References" ]
[ "Mitromorpha", "Invertebrates of São Tomé and Príncipe", "Fauna of Príncipe", "Gastropods described in 2012" ]
projected-17332013-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copenhagen%20Studies%20in%20Indo-European
Copenhagen Studies in Indo-European
Introduction
Copenhagen Studies in Indo-European () is an academic book series on Indo-European studies and related subjects. The series was founded in 1999 and is published by Museum Tusculanum Press. Its chief editor was Jens Elmegård Rasmussen from its initiation until his death in 2013. The current chief editor is Birgit Anette Olsen.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Indo-European studies" ]
projected-17332013-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copenhagen%20Studies%20in%20Indo-European
Copenhagen Studies in Indo-European
Volumes
Copenhagen Studies in Indo-European () is an academic book series on Indo-European studies and related subjects. The series was founded in 1999 and is published by Museum Tusculanum Press. Its chief editor was Jens Elmegård Rasmussen from its initiation until his death in 2013. The current chief editor is Birgit Anette Olsen.
#9. Kin, Clan and Community in Prehistoric Europe, edited by Birgit Anette Olsen and Benedicte Whitehead Nielsen (2021). #8. Usque ad Radices. Indo-European Studies in Honour of Birgit Anette Olsen, edited by Bjarne Simmelkjær Sandgaard Hansen, Adam Hyllested, Anders Richardt Jørgensen, Guus Kroonen, Jenny Helena Larsson, Benedicte Nielsen Whitehead, Thomas Olander and Tobias Mosbæk Søborg (2017). #7. Language and Prehistory of the Indo-European Peoples. A Cross-Disciplinary Perspective, edited by Adam Hyllested, Benedicte Nielsen Whitehead, Thomas Olander and Birgit Anette Olsen (2017). #6. The Linguistic Roots of Europe, edited by Robert Mailhammer, Theo Vennemann and Birgit Anette Olsen (2015). #5. Indo-European accent and ablaut, edited by Thomas Olander, Paul Widmer and Götz Keydana (2013). #4. The Sound of Indo-European, edited by Benedicte Nielsen Whitehead, Thomas Olander, Birgit Anette Olsen and Jens Elmegård Rasmussen (2012). #3. Internal Reconstruction in Indo-European, edited by Thomas Olander and Jens Elmegård Rasmussen (2009). #2. Indo-European Word Formation, edited by Birgit Anette Olsen and James Clackson (2004). #1. Selected Papers on Indo-European Linguistics, by Jens Elmegård Rasmussen (1999). Vol. 1-2.
[]
[ "Volumes" ]
[ "Indo-European studies" ]
projected-17332035-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karen%20Johnson%20%28violinist%29
Karen Johnson (violinist)
Introduction
Karen Johnson is an American violinist. She began her studies at the age of 4. She has served as the concertmaster of the Juilliard Orchestra and of the Richmond Symphony Orchestra. She was also a guest concertmaster of the Phoenix Symphony, Seattle Symphony, and the Oregon Symphony in Portland. She has served as concertmaster of The "President's Own" Marine Band Chamber Orchestra.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "American classical violinists", "Concertmasters", "Year of birth missing (living people)", "Living people", "Juilliard School alumni", "21st-century classical violinists", "Women classical violinists", "21st-century American women musicians", "People from Gilbert, Arizona", "Classical musicians f...
projected-17332035-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karen%20Johnson%20%28violinist%29
Karen Johnson (violinist)
References
Karen Johnson is an American violinist. She began her studies at the age of 4. She has served as the concertmaster of the Juilliard Orchestra and of the Richmond Symphony Orchestra. She was also a guest concertmaster of the Phoenix Symphony, Seattle Symphony, and the Oregon Symphony in Portland. She has served as concertmaster of The "President's Own" Marine Band Chamber Orchestra.
Category:American classical violinists Category:Concertmasters Category:Year of birth missing (living people) Category:Living people Category:Juilliard School alumni Category:21st-century classical violinists Category:Women classical violinists Category:21st-century American women musicians Category:People from Gilbert, Arizona Category:Classical musicians from Arizona Category:United States Marine Band musicians Category:21st-century American violinists
[]
[ "References" ]
[ "American classical violinists", "Concertmasters", "Year of birth missing (living people)", "Living people", "Juilliard School alumni", "21st-century classical violinists", "Women classical violinists", "21st-century American women musicians", "People from Gilbert, Arizona", "Classical musicians f...
projected-17332067-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parklawn
Parklawn
Introduction
Parklawn may refer to: Parklawn, California an area of The Queensway – Humber Bay, Canada Parklawn Memorial Park, a cemetery in Rockville, Maryland, United States
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[]
projected-17332148-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WUPG
WUPG
Introduction
WUPG (formerly WUPZ) (96.7 FM) is a radio station licensed to Republic, Michigan. The station is currently owned by Armada Media Corporation, through licensee AMC Partners Escanaba, LLC, and was granted its license on April 17, 2008. The station signed on in July 2008 with a Variety Hits format. On March 4, 2014, changed formats to Classic Country branded as "Yooper Country 96.7". In 2017, the station changed their brand to "The Maverick", using the same brand as sister stations WTIQ and WGMV. Part if the UP's Radio Results Network.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Radio stations in Michigan" ]
projected-17332148-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WUPG
WUPG
Sources
WUPG (formerly WUPZ) (96.7 FM) is a radio station licensed to Republic, Michigan. The station is currently owned by Armada Media Corporation, through licensee AMC Partners Escanaba, LLC, and was granted its license on April 17, 2008. The station signed on in July 2008 with a Variety Hits format. On March 4, 2014, changed formats to Classic Country branded as "Yooper Country 96.7". In 2017, the station changed their brand to "The Maverick", using the same brand as sister stations WTIQ and WGMV. Part if the UP's Radio Results Network.
Michiguide.com - WUPG History
[]
[ "Sources" ]
[ "Radio stations in Michigan" ]
projected-17332175-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaborative%20Fusion
Collaborative Fusion
Introduction
Collaborative Fusion, Inc. (CFI) was a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based provider of ESAR-VHP and incident management software for coordination of emergency personnel. Its president and vice president were founders Atila Omer and Bryan Kaplan, respectively. CFI was acquired in 2011 by the Intermedix Corporation, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners. Following the spin-off of Intermedix Corporation and Juvare, LLC in May, 2018, Collaborative Fusion, Inc. became a wholly owned subsidiary of Juvare, LLC, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Companies established in 2001", "Companies based in Pittsburgh" ]
projected-17332175-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaborative%20Fusion
Collaborative Fusion
Collaborative Fusion History
Collaborative Fusion, Inc. (CFI) was a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based provider of ESAR-VHP and incident management software for coordination of emergency personnel. Its president and vice president were founders Atila Omer and Bryan Kaplan, respectively. CFI was acquired in 2011 by the Intermedix Corporation, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners. Following the spin-off of Intermedix Corporation and Juvare, LLC in May, 2018, Collaborative Fusion, Inc. became a wholly owned subsidiary of Juvare, LLC, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners.
Collaborative Fusion, Inc. (CFI) was a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based provider of ESAR-VHP and incident management software for coordination of emergency personnel. Its president and vice president were founders Atila Omer and Bryan Kaplan, respectively. CFI was acquired in 2011 by the Intermedix Corporation, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners. Following the spin-off of Intermedix Corporation and Juvare, LLC in May, 2018, Collaborative Fusion, Inc. became a wholly owned subsidiary of Juvare, LLC, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners. CFI was founded in 2001 by Bryan Kaplan and Atila Omer, both alumni of Carnegie Mellon University. Prior to attending Carnegie Mellon, Kaplan graduated from the Harvard-Westlake School in Los Angeles. Omer, a graduate of Detroit, Michigan's Wayne State University, previously worked at JPMorgan Chase before attending Carnegie Mellon's MBA program and subsequently co-founding Collaborative Fusion. At the beginning of 2008, CFI moved into its new corporate headquarters offices on 5849 Forbes Avenue in Squirrel Hill, Pennsylvania.
[]
[ "Collaborative Fusion History" ]
[ "Companies established in 2001", "Companies based in Pittsburgh" ]
projected-17332175-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaborative%20Fusion
Collaborative Fusion
Clients
Collaborative Fusion, Inc. (CFI) was a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based provider of ESAR-VHP and incident management software for coordination of emergency personnel. Its president and vice president were founders Atila Omer and Bryan Kaplan, respectively. CFI was acquired in 2011 by the Intermedix Corporation, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners. Following the spin-off of Intermedix Corporation and Juvare, LLC in May, 2018, Collaborative Fusion, Inc. became a wholly owned subsidiary of Juvare, LLC, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners.
Past and present clients include local, state, and federal governmental government agencies within the United States. The Department of Health and Human Services awarded CFI contracts for disaster relief in the aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005. They also have developed and support technology programs for state governments, including the State of California's Medical Volunteer System. CFI also administers a number of federally mandated ESAR-VHP programs for state governments.
[]
[ "Clients" ]
[ "Companies established in 2001", "Companies based in Pittsburgh" ]
projected-17332175-003
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaborative%20Fusion
Collaborative Fusion
Accolades
Collaborative Fusion, Inc. (CFI) was a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based provider of ESAR-VHP and incident management software for coordination of emergency personnel. Its president and vice president were founders Atila Omer and Bryan Kaplan, respectively. CFI was acquired in 2011 by the Intermedix Corporation, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners. Following the spin-off of Intermedix Corporation and Juvare, LLC in May, 2018, Collaborative Fusion, Inc. became a wholly owned subsidiary of Juvare, LLC, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners.
CFI has been selected as one of the "50 Best Places to Work in Western Pennsylvania" in 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2010 by the Pittsburgh Business Times as well as #31 of the "Top 50 Best Places to Work in Western Pennsylvania with Under 50 Employees" by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
[]
[ "Accolades" ]
[ "Companies established in 2001", "Companies based in Pittsburgh" ]
projected-17332175-004
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaborative%20Fusion
Collaborative Fusion
Juvare Acquisition
Collaborative Fusion, Inc. (CFI) was a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based provider of ESAR-VHP and incident management software for coordination of emergency personnel. Its president and vice president were founders Atila Omer and Bryan Kaplan, respectively. CFI was acquired in 2011 by the Intermedix Corporation, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners. Following the spin-off of Intermedix Corporation and Juvare, LLC in May, 2018, Collaborative Fusion, Inc. became a wholly owned subsidiary of Juvare, LLC, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners.
On September 19, 2011, the Intermedix Corporation, a Florida-based healthcare technology provider, announced that it had acquired Collaborative Fusion. Following the spin-off of Intermedix Corporation and Juvare, LLC in May, 2018, Collaborative Fusion, Inc. became a wholly owned subsidiary of Juvare, LLC, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners. Headquartered in Atlanta, GA, Juvare began operations in 2018. The company operates on a global scale working with emergency and incident response teams from federal, state and local agencies. In an emergency, Juvare solutions are used by emergency and incident management teams to coordinate and respond to all disasters from natural disasters to mad-made disasters, providing solutions to emergency management and incidents team members. Juvare’s platform solutions are used in multiple industries such as Aviation, Corporate Enterprise, Education, Emergency and Incident Management, Energy and Utilities, Federal Agencies, Government Defense, Healthcare, Public Health, State and Local Government Agencies, and Transportation. Juvare’s WebEOC platform is the most widely-used incident management solution in the industry. The system was used to help coordinate and prepare EMS in Atlanta, Georgia for Super Bowl LIII held on Feb. 3, 2019, when over 1 million visitors across the globe came to the city. Using Juvare’s solution, key personnel were able to plan for the event, monitor incidents and relay pertinent information to EMS (Emergency Medical Services), firefighters, hospital staff, state and local police, and federal government agencies regarding emergencies and crisis incidents, also helping to coordinate supplies and labor power to specific locations, and ambulances to local hospitals. Other Juvare solutions include CORES HAN, a high-volume mass alert platform; CORES RMS, which helps coordinate volunteer personnel; eICS Electronic Incident Command System; EMTrack, a patient and population tracking solution; EMResource, a management platform for healthcare and emergency resources; and Fleeteyes, which is used for tracking and accessing emergency management fleet vehicles.
[]
[ "Juvare Acquisition" ]
[ "Companies established in 2001", "Companies based in Pittsburgh" ]
projected-17332175-005
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaborative%20Fusion
Collaborative Fusion
See also
Collaborative Fusion, Inc. (CFI) was a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based provider of ESAR-VHP and incident management software for coordination of emergency personnel. Its president and vice president were founders Atila Omer and Bryan Kaplan, respectively. CFI was acquired in 2011 by the Intermedix Corporation, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners. Following the spin-off of Intermedix Corporation and Juvare, LLC in May, 2018, Collaborative Fusion, Inc. became a wholly owned subsidiary of Juvare, LLC, a firm owned by private equity firm Thomas H. Lee Partners.
Juvare Emergency management
[]
[ "See also" ]
[ "Companies established in 2001", "Companies based in Pittsburgh" ]
projected-17332196-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart%20of%20England
Heart of England
Introduction
Heart of England may refer to: English Midlands Heart of England School Heart of England Co-operative Society Heart of England NHS Foundation Trust Heart of England Way Heart of England, a region in the Britain in Bloom horticultural competition
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[]
projected-17332264-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swanton%2C%20Maryland
Swanton, Maryland
Introduction
Swanton is an unincorporated area and census-designated place (CDP) in Garrett County, Maryland, United States. Swanton is close to several recreation areas, such as Deep Creek Lake State Park and Jennings Randolph Lake. A church and a post office are located in the downtown area. The population was 58 at the 2010 census. Anderson Chapel was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Census-designated places in Garrett County, Maryland", "Census-designated places in Maryland" ]
projected-17332264-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swanton%2C%20Maryland
Swanton, Maryland
References
Swanton is an unincorporated area and census-designated place (CDP) in Garrett County, Maryland, United States. Swanton is close to several recreation areas, such as Deep Creek Lake State Park and Jennings Randolph Lake. A church and a post office are located in the downtown area. The population was 58 at the 2010 census. Anderson Chapel was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.
Category:Census-designated places in Garrett County, Maryland Category:Census-designated places in Maryland
[]
[ "References" ]
[ "Census-designated places in Garrett County, Maryland", "Census-designated places in Maryland" ]
projected-17332273-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution%20of%20color%20vision
Evolution of color vision
Introduction
Color vision, a proximate adaptation of the vision sensory modality, allows for the discrimination of light based on its wavelength components.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Color vision", "Evolution by phenotype" ]
projected-17332273-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution%20of%20color%20vision
Evolution of color vision
Improved detection sensitivity
Color vision, a proximate adaptation of the vision sensory modality, allows for the discrimination of light based on its wavelength components.
The evolutionary process of switching from a single photopigment to two different pigments would have provided early ancestors with a sensitivity advantage in two ways. In one way, adding a new pigment would allow them to see a wider range of the electromagnetic spectrum. Secondly, new random connections would create wavelength opponency and the new wavelength opponent neurons would be much more sensitive than the non-wavelength opponent neurons. This is the result of some wavelength distributions favouring excitation instead of inhibition. Both excitation and inhibition would be features of a neural substrate during the formation of a second pigment. Overall, the advantage gained from increased sensitivity with wavelength opponency would open up opportunities for future exploitation by mutations and even further improvement.
[]
[ "Improved detection sensitivity" ]
[ "Color vision", "Evolution by phenotype" ]
projected-17332273-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution%20of%20color%20vision
Evolution of color vision
Invertebrates
Color vision, a proximate adaptation of the vision sensory modality, allows for the discrimination of light based on its wavelength components.
Color vision requires a number of opsin molecules with different absorbance peaks, and at least three opsins were present in the ancestor of arthropods; chelicerates and pancrustaceans today possess color vision.
[]
[ "Invertebrates" ]
[ "Color vision", "Evolution by phenotype" ]
projected-17332273-003
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution%20of%20color%20vision
Evolution of color vision
Vertebrates
Color vision, a proximate adaptation of the vision sensory modality, allows for the discrimination of light based on its wavelength components.
Researchers studying the opsin genes responsible for color-vision pigments have long known that four photopigment opsins exist in birds, reptiles and teleost fish. This indicates that the common ancestor of amphibians and amniotes (≈350 million years ago) had tetrachromatic vision — the ability to see four dimensions of color.
[]
[ "Vertebrates" ]
[ "Color vision", "Evolution by phenotype" ]
projected-17332273-004
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution%20of%20color%20vision
Evolution of color vision
Mammals
Color vision, a proximate adaptation of the vision sensory modality, allows for the discrimination of light based on its wavelength components.
Today, most mammals possess dichromatic vision, corresponding to protanopia red–green color blindness. They can thus see violet, blue, green and yellow light, but cannot see ultraviolet, and deep red light. This was probably a feature of the first mammalian ancestors, which were likely small, nocturnal, and burrowing. At the time of the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event million years ago, the burrowing ability probably helped mammals survive extinction. Mammalian species of the time had already started to differentiate, but were still generally small, comparable in size to shrews; this small size would have helped them to find shelter in protected environments.
[]
[ "Mammals" ]
[ "Color vision", "Evolution by phenotype" ]
projected-17332273-005
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution%20of%20color%20vision
Evolution of color vision
Monotremes and marsupials
Color vision, a proximate adaptation of the vision sensory modality, allows for the discrimination of light based on its wavelength components.
It is postulated that some early monotremes, marsupials, and placentals were semiaquatic or burrowing, as there are multiple mammalian lineages with such habits today. Any burrowing or semiaquatic mammal would have had additional protection from Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary environmental stresses. However, many such species evidently possessed poor color vision in comparison with non-mammalian vertebrate species of the time, including reptiles, birds, and amphibians.
[]
[ "Monotremes and marsupials" ]
[ "Color vision", "Evolution by phenotype" ]
projected-17332273-006
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution%20of%20color%20vision
Evolution of color vision
Primates
Color vision, a proximate adaptation of the vision sensory modality, allows for the discrimination of light based on its wavelength components.
Since the beginning of the Paleogene Period, surviving mammals enlarged, moving away by adaptive radiation from a burrowing existence and into the open, although most species kept their relatively poor color vision. Exceptions occur for some marsupials (which possibly kept their original color vision) and some primates—including humans. Primates, as an order of mammals, began to emerge around the beginning of the Paleogene Period. Primates have re-developed trichromatic color vision since that time, by the mechanism of gene duplication, being under unusually high evolutionary pressure to develop color vision better than the mammalian standard. Ability to perceive red and orange hues allows tree-dwelling primates to discern them from green. This is particularly important for primates in the detection of red and orange fruit, as well as nutrient-rich new foliage, in which the red and orange carotenoids have not yet been masked by chlorophyll. Another theory is that detecting skin flushing and thereby mood may have influenced the development of primate trichromate vision. The color red also has other effects on primate and human behavior, as discussed in the color psychology article. Today, among simians, the catarrhines (Old World monkeys and apes, including humans) are routinely trichromatic—meaning that both males and females possess three opsins, sensitive to short-wave, medium-wave, and long-wave light—while, conversely, only a small fraction of platyrrhine primates (New World monkeys) are trichromats.
[]
[ "Primates" ]
[ "Color vision", "Evolution by phenotype" ]
projected-17332273-007
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution%20of%20color%20vision
Evolution of color vision
See also
Color vision, a proximate adaptation of the vision sensory modality, allows for the discrimination of light based on its wavelength components.
Evolution of color vision in primates Evolution of the eye
[]
[ "See also" ]
[ "Color vision", "Evolution by phenotype" ]
projected-17332273-008
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution%20of%20color%20vision
Evolution of color vision
References
Color vision, a proximate adaptation of the vision sensory modality, allows for the discrimination of light based on its wavelength components.
Category:Color vision Colour vision
[]
[ "References" ]
[ "Color vision", "Evolution by phenotype" ]
projected-17332275-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20number-one%20singles%20of%201956%20%28France%29
List of number-one singles of 1956 (France)
Introduction
This is a list of the French singles & airplay chart reviews number-ones of 1956.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "1956 in France", "1956 record charts", "Lists of number-one songs in France" ]
projected-17332275-003
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20number-one%20singles%20of%201956%20%28France%29
List of number-one singles of 1956 (France)
See also
This is a list of the French singles & airplay chart reviews number-ones of 1956.
1956 in music List of number-one hits (France)
[]
[ "See also" ]
[ "1956 in France", "1956 record charts", "Lists of number-one songs in France" ]
projected-17332275-004
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List%20of%20number-one%20singles%20of%201956%20%28France%29
List of number-one singles of 1956 (France)
References
This is a list of the French singles & airplay chart reviews number-ones of 1956.
Category:1956 in France France singles Category:Lists of number-one songs in France
[]
[ "References" ]
[ "1956 in France", "1956 record charts", "Lists of number-one songs in France" ]
projected-17332289-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS%20PC-1179
USS PC-1179
Introduction
USS PC-1179 was a built for the United States Navy during World War II. She was later renamed Morris (PC-1179) but never saw active service under that name.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "PC-461-class submarine chasers", "Ships built in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin", "1943 ships", "World War II patrol vessels of the United States" ]
projected-17332289-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS%20PC-1179
USS PC-1179
Career
USS PC-1179 was a built for the United States Navy during World War II. She was later renamed Morris (PC-1179) but never saw active service under that name.
PC-1179 was commissioned in 1944 and decommissioned in 1946, she was renamed as the eighth USS Morris in 1956. She was struck from the navy register on 1 July 1960 and sold on 10 May 1961, to Zidell Shipbreakers in Portland, Oregon for $17,038.88.
[]
[ "Career" ]
[ "PC-461-class submarine chasers", "Ships built in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin", "1943 ships", "World War II patrol vessels of the United States" ]
projected-17332374-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LDRSHIP
LDRSHIP
Introduction
LDRSHIP is an acronym for the seven basic values of the United States Army: Loyalty - bear true faith and allegiance to the U.S. Constitution, the Army, your unit and other soldiers. Duty - Fulfill your obligations. Respect - Treat people as they should be treated. Selfless Service - Put the welfare of the nation, the Army, and your subordinates before your own. Honor - Live up to all the Army values. Integrity - Do what’s right, legally and morally. Personal Courage - Face fear, danger or adversity (physical or moral).
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "United States Army traditions" ]
projected-17332374-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LDRSHIP
LDRSHIP
See also
LDRSHIP is an acronym for the seven basic values of the United States Army: Loyalty - bear true faith and allegiance to the U.S. Constitution, the Army, your unit and other soldiers. Duty - Fulfill your obligations. Respect - Treat people as they should be treated. Selfless Service - Put the welfare of the nation, the Army, and your subordinates before your own. Honor - Live up to all the Army values. Integrity - Do what’s right, legally and morally. Personal Courage - Face fear, danger or adversity (physical or moral).
Leadership United States Army U.S. Soldier's Creed
[]
[ "See also" ]
[ "United States Army traditions" ]
projected-17332409-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaffery%20Sports%20Club%20Ground
Jaffery Sports Club Ground
Introduction
The Jaffery Sports Club Ground is a cricket ground situated in Nairobi, Kenya. It hosted its first ODI international during the 2007 World Cricket League in Kenya. The Ground is owned by a sect of the Muslim community in Nairobi. Hence most of the players in the Club team are Islamic. This club plays host to the matches of the Nairobi Jaffery Sports Club from the Nairobi Provincial Cricket Association. Many of the young players from the cricket team have gone on to represent Kenya at various levels including Kenya, Kenya 'A', and at junior levels. A few players from this club have also gone on to represent different teams at the Sahara Elite League. A few of these players include Charles Obuya (Eastern Aces), and Ashwin Prabhakar (Southern Stars, Kenya 'A').
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Sport in Nairobi", "Cricket grounds in Kenya" ]
projected-17332409-005
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jaffery%20Sports%20Club%20Ground
Jaffery Sports Club Ground
References
The Jaffery Sports Club Ground is a cricket ground situated in Nairobi, Kenya. It hosted its first ODI international during the 2007 World Cricket League in Kenya. The Ground is owned by a sect of the Muslim community in Nairobi. Hence most of the players in the Club team are Islamic. This club plays host to the matches of the Nairobi Jaffery Sports Club from the Nairobi Provincial Cricket Association. Many of the young players from the cricket team have gone on to represent Kenya at various levels including Kenya, Kenya 'A', and at junior levels. A few players from this club have also gone on to represent different teams at the Sahara Elite League. A few of these players include Charles Obuya (Eastern Aces), and Ashwin Prabhakar (Southern Stars, Kenya 'A').
Cricinfo ground page Category:Sport in Nairobi Category:Cricket grounds in Kenya
[]
[ "References" ]
[ "Sport in Nairobi", "Cricket grounds in Kenya" ]
projected-17332421-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dr.%20Charles%20Cotton%20House
Dr. Charles Cotton House
Introduction
The Dr. Charles Cotton House is an historic house at 5 Cotton Court in Newport, Rhode Island. It is one of the city's oldest houses. It is a -story wood-frame structure, five bays wide, with a large central chimney and a hipped roof. The original portion of the house was built around 1720 with large Georgian style additions in the 18th century and modifications in the nineteenth century. Dr. Charles Cotton, a great-grandson of Josiah Cotton and surgeon aboard the USS Constitution, owned the house in the early 19th century and gave the house its current name. The Cotton House was taken by eminent domain by the Newport Restoration Foundation in 1974 from the Cotton family who owned the house for 157 years. The Foundation moved the house in 1977 from its original location across the adjoining parking lot. The house was restored from 1979 to 1980. The site added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Rhode Island", "Houses in Newport, Rhode Island", "National Register of Historic Places in Newport, Rhode Island", "Historic district contributing properties in Rhode Island" ]
projected-17332421-001
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dr.%20Charles%20Cotton%20House
Dr. Charles Cotton House
See also
The Dr. Charles Cotton House is an historic house at 5 Cotton Court in Newport, Rhode Island. It is one of the city's oldest houses. It is a -story wood-frame structure, five bays wide, with a large central chimney and a hipped roof. The original portion of the house was built around 1720 with large Georgian style additions in the 18th century and modifications in the nineteenth century. Dr. Charles Cotton, a great-grandson of Josiah Cotton and surgeon aboard the USS Constitution, owned the house in the early 19th century and gave the house its current name. The Cotton House was taken by eminent domain by the Newport Restoration Foundation in 1974 from the Cotton family who owned the house for 157 years. The Foundation moved the house in 1977 from its original location across the adjoining parking lot. The house was restored from 1979 to 1980. The site added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.
National Register of Historic Places listings in Newport County, Rhode Island
[]
[ "See also" ]
[ "Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Rhode Island", "Houses in Newport, Rhode Island", "National Register of Historic Places in Newport, Rhode Island", "Historic district contributing properties in Rhode Island" ]
projected-17332421-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dr.%20Charles%20Cotton%20House
Dr. Charles Cotton House
References and external links
The Dr. Charles Cotton House is an historic house at 5 Cotton Court in Newport, Rhode Island. It is one of the city's oldest houses. It is a -story wood-frame structure, five bays wide, with a large central chimney and a hipped roof. The original portion of the house was built around 1720 with large Georgian style additions in the 18th century and modifications in the nineteenth century. Dr. Charles Cotton, a great-grandson of Josiah Cotton and surgeon aboard the USS Constitution, owned the house in the early 19th century and gave the house its current name. The Cotton House was taken by eminent domain by the Newport Restoration Foundation in 1974 from the Cotton family who owned the house for 157 years. The Foundation moved the house in 1977 from its original location across the adjoining parking lot. The house was restored from 1979 to 1980. The site added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.
Newport Restoration Foundation information Category:Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Rhode Island Category:Houses in Newport, Rhode Island Category:National Register of Historic Places in Newport, Rhode Island Category:Historic district contributing properties in Rhode Island
[]
[ "References and external links" ]
[ "Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Rhode Island", "Houses in Newport, Rhode Island", "National Register of Historic Places in Newport, Rhode Island", "Historic district contributing properties in Rhode Island" ]
projected-20467597-000
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/559th%20Flying%20Training%20Squadron
559th Flying Training Squadron
Introduction
The 559th Flying Training Squadron is part of the 12th Flying Training Wing based at Randolph Air Force Base, Texas. It operates the Beechcraft T-6 Texan II conducting flying training.
[]
[ "Introduction" ]
[ "Flying training squadrons of the United States Air Force", "Military units and formations in Texas" ]
projected-20467597-002
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/559th%20Flying%20Training%20Squadron
559th Flying Training Squadron
World War II
The 559th Flying Training Squadron is part of the 12th Flying Training Wing based at Randolph Air Force Base, Texas. It operates the Beechcraft T-6 Texan II conducting flying training.
The 559th was initially constituted as the 81st Bombardment Squadron, Light on 20 November 1940, assigned to the 12th Bombardment Group, Light but wasn’t activated (considered the unit’s “birthday”) until 15 January 1941 at McChord Field, Washington. The squadron's original manning came from the 34th Bombardment Squadron consisting of 27 enlisted men and 1 officer, Major John J. O'Hara, who assumed command. Over the ensuing six months the squadron's ranks swelled to 190 enlisted men and 15 officers. The 81st used one Douglas B-18 Bolo, one Douglas B-23 Dragon, and two PT-17 Kaydets, to conduct flight training while some of its rated personnel attended various Air Corps technical schools or on detached service with the Ferrying Command. The squadron was equipped with the North American B-25 Mitchell in January 1942 and redesignated a medium bombardment squadron. Shortly thereafter the 12th Bombardment Group was transferred to Esler Field, Camp Beauregard, Louisiana. Soon after arriving the squadron initiated a training program which included all phases of combat flying, bombing, and gunnery. Bombing practice was conducted on the range in the Kisatchie National Forest, while gunnery training was accomplished in Army Air Forces schools at Panama City, Florida, and Las Vegas, Nevada. The squadron also participated in general field operations training near DeRidder, Louisiana. In late the 81st served as part of a detachment force of 40 aircraft and 450 officers and men that was sent to Stockton, California, for over-water training. In June 1942 the squadron began its movement overseas. The air echelon staged at Morrison Field, Florida. On 14 July it flew to Accra, British West Africa then on to Khartoum in Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, and Cairo, Egypt. By mid-August the air echelon was in place at Deversoir, Egypt. The ground echelon had left Esler Field by train on 3 July for Fort Dix, New Jersey, where it boarded the SS Louis Pasteur and sailed from New York on 16 July, arriving at Freetown, Sierra Leone, eight days later. The personnel then sailed around the Cape of Good Hope, via Durban, South Africa, and arrived at Port Tewfik, Egypt, on 16 August. Two days later the ground echelon arrived at Deversoir. Upon its arrival the 81st underwent a training period with light bomber wings of the Royal Air Force and the South African Air Force. This training included five missions intended to acquaint the American aircrews with aids to navigation in the Middle East. The first mission was flown on the night of 16 August 1942 and consisted of a bombing attack on the harbor at Mersa Matruh. The raid was followed by attacks on Axis airdromes at Doba and Fuka, and on docks at Tobruk, Libya. In September the 81st Bombardment Squadron went into action with the RAF's Desert Air Force in support of the British Eighth Army. One of the unit's earliest missions was a night raid on Sidi Haneish, in which it lost three bombers. During the weeks which followed the squadron struck Axis landing grounds, transportation facilities, and troop concentrations. After the Battle of El Alamein the squadron conducted a brief training program consisting principally of aerial gunnery, navigational flights, and night landings. The squadron resumed combat operations in December after rebasing further west. It participated in the pursuit of Field Marshal Rommel's Afrika Korps to Tripoli, which fell late in January 1943. In February 1943 the 81st was sent to Algeria, where it joined elements of the Twelfth Air Force in support of Allied ground forces pushing eastward. After the German forces had been defeated in Africa the squadron was stationed at Hergla, Tunisia, and began participation in the Pantellerian campaign by pattern bombing coastal batteries on the island of Pantelleria. Following the capitulation of Axis forces in Pantelleria, on 11 June, the squadron conducted an intensive, three-week, program for training replacement crews recently arrived from the Zone of the Interior. The squadron also received replacement aircraft bringing the total from 13 to 24. Through July the squadron conducted bombing operations against Axis aerodromes, harbor installations, and towns on the island of Sicily. Early in August it transferred to Ponte Olivo Airdrome, Sicily, whence it continued to operate against Sicilian targets until the island was completely cleared of Axis forces. On 23 August the squadron moved to Gerbini Main Airdrome, Sicily, preliminary to entering the Italian campaign. From September to early-November 1943, the 81st flew numerous missions in support of the American Fifth Army and the British Eighth Army then in the early stages of the Invasion of Italy. The types of targets most frequently attacked were rail junctions and marshalling yards, airdromes, landing grounds, highway bridges, gun emplacements, and troop concentrations. After rebasing to Foggia Main, Italy, on 10 November the squadron increased the range of its bombing missions to include Yugoslavia. Prior to the end of January 1944 it participated in 10 raids on harbor and dock facilities along the Yugoslavian Adriatic Coast, at Zadar, Split, and Šibenik. In addition, the squadron flew a mission against the Mostar Main Airdrome in Yugoslavia and another directed at the Eleusis Airdrome in Greece. The 81st Bombardment Squadron's final Italian Campaign mission took place on 30 January 1944 in an intended attack upon a road junction near Rome. A cloud covering completely obscured the target as the bombers approached, however, so they aborted the mission. The squadron was transferred to the China-Burma-India Theater of Operations and consequently spent seven weeks relocating. On 9 February the entire unit sailed from Taranto, Italy, aboard the English vessel Diwara, for Port Said, Egypt then by train to Cairo, and then sailed, again aboard the Dilwara, from Port Tewfik for Bombay, India. From Bombay it moved by train and a Ganges River boat to Tezgaon Airdrome near Calcutta. Equipped with new bombers, it initiated a training program in low-level attack and bombing methods which were being used extensively in that area at the time. The 81st entered combat on 16 April 1944 when it dispatched 12 B-25s in an attack upon railway sidings and a Japanese supply dump at Mogaung, Burma. One bomber was lost in the raid. Eight days later the 81st attacked Japanese stores and troop concentrations in the Kazu area. In May the it made numerous attacks upon the Tiddim Road in Burma, as well as on railway lines running north and east of Mandalay. Probably the unit's most significant mission during the month was its participation in the bombing of Ningthoukhong, Burma, a key position to the Japanese defensive line. The town was reported to have housed Japanese artillery pieces, antitank guns, tanks, and as many as 1,000 troops. During the ensuing 12 months the 81st helped to gain air superiority over the Japanese in Burma and provided support for Allied ground forces in driving them completely out of that country. The squadron's efforts were expended principally in bombing attacks on airdromes and airfields, headquarters buildings, roads, highway bridges, gun emplacements, railway bridges, rail junctions, marshalling yards, storage areas, and troop concentrations. Notable was the series of missions which contributed to the capture of Myritkyina by General Joseph W. Stilwell's ground forces early in August. The unit also participated in tactical operations during February and March 1945 helping to capture Miektila and Mandalay in May. In September 1944 the unit extended its range of operations to include targets in China. At that time the Japanese were attempting to throw the Chinese back across the Salween River. The 81st provided effective support to the Chinese troops engaged in repelling the Japanese offensive. For its part the squadron participated in a series of eight bombing missions targeting Japanese stores and troop concentrations, principally in the Chinese cities of Bhamo, Mangshih, and Wanling. With the capture of Burma in the spring of 1945, combat operations for the 81st Bombardment Squadron were greatly reduced. At its base in India the unit began transition training in Douglas A-26 Invader aircraft. Training ceased with the surrender of Japan in August 1945. The air echelon of the squadron left India on 27 September on the first leg of its journey back to the Zone of the Interior. Departure of the ground echelon was delayed, however, was delayed for three months, sailing on Christmas Eve 1945 it Karachi, India, aboard the Hawaiian Shipper, for Seattle, Washington. There was a brief stop in Singapore, after which the voyage was continued out through the South China Sea and into the Pacific. On 21 January the squadron was reduced in strength to one officer and two enlisted men and then inactivated at Fort Lawton, Washington.
[]
[ "History", "World War II" ]
[ "Flying training squadrons of the United States Air Force", "Military units and formations in Texas" ]
projected-20467597-003
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/559th%20Flying%20Training%20Squadron
559th Flying Training Squadron
Post War activation
The 559th Flying Training Squadron is part of the 12th Flying Training Wing based at Randolph Air Force Base, Texas. It operates the Beechcraft T-6 Texan II conducting flying training.
Fifteen months later, on 19 May 1947, it was activated at Langley Field, Virginia as a light bombardment squadron. Without ever having been manned, however, the squadron was inactivated on 10 September 1948.
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[ "History", "Post War activation" ]
[ "Flying training squadrons of the United States Air Force", "Military units and formations in Texas" ]
projected-20467597-004
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/559th%20Flying%20Training%20Squadron
559th Flying Training Squadron
Strategic fighter operations
The 559th Flying Training Squadron is part of the 12th Flying Training Wing based at Randolph Air Force Base, Texas. It operates the Beechcraft T-6 Texan II conducting flying training.
The squadron was redesignated the 559th Fighter-Escort Squadron, and assigned to Strategic Air Command on 27 October 1950. On 1 November it was activated at Turner Air Force Base, Georgia assigned to the 12th Fighter-Escort Group. Early in December 1950 it transferred to Bergstrom Air Force Base, Texas. The primary mission of the 559th was to organize and train a force capable of providing immediate fighter escort and air base protection in any part of the world. In January 1951 the squadron began flying training in the Republic F-84 Thunderjet. The program principally of routine transition training, night flying, instrument flights, and ground controlled approaches. Bombing and gunnery practice was accomplished at the Matagorda Island Bombing and Gunnery Range on Matagorda Island, just off the Texas coast. Late in April the squadron participated in a practice mission to Turner Air Force Base. Early in June the 559th participated in a long-range escort mission conducted by the 12th Fighter-Escort Wing. All told, 75 F-84s were involved. After staging at Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, they were divided into two sections. One section escorted a large number of B-36 Peacemakers in a simulated bombing mission over New York City. The other section escorted another group of B-36s in a similar mission over Detroit. All the Thunderjets staged at Selfridge Air Force Base, Michigan, before returning to Bergstrom. In mid-July 1951 the 559th went on temporary duty to RAF Manston, England. The move was made by the Military Air Transport Service and by civilian aircraft. Having left its own fighter aircraft at Bergstrom, the wing used F-84s of the 31st Fighter-Escort Wing which it replaced at Manston. Operations overseas began during the latter part of July with orientation flights to various United States Air Force bases in England. During August all units of the 12th Wing took part in a 7th Air Division operation which was designed to measure the defense of Norway. While in England the 559th Fighter-Escort Squadron and its two companion units, the 560th and 561st Squadrons, went to Wheelus Field, Libya, for two weeks of gunnery practice. Late in November 1951 the wing began moving back to the United States. The advanced and rear echelons were airlifted all the way from Manston to Austin by MATS aircraft. The second increment sailed aboard the USS General W. G. Haan to Newark, New Jersey, and made its way to the wing's home base via MATS aircraft. Back at Bergstrom the squadron was equipped with new F-84s. In January 1953 the 559th was redesignated as a strategic fighter squadron. In May it deployed to Chitose Air Base, Japan for approximately 90 days. The principal purpose of the deployment was to provide training for the wing and enable it, while operating as a part of the Northern Area Air Defense Command, to augment the Japanese Air Defense Force. On 15 May replaced the 508th Strategic Fighter Wing on rotation in Japan. On 12 June the commanding officer of the 559th Squadron, Lieutenant Colonel Paul M. Hall, was killed in an airplane crash while making a ground-controlled approach. The squadron redeployed to Bergstrom Air Force Base in August. Over a period of several months after returning to its home base in August 1953, the 559th Strategic Fighter Squadron made special efforts to qualify all of its aircrews as combat ready. At the same time it was interested in requalifying combat ready crews in various phases of bombing and gunnery techniques. For these purposes extensive use was made of the bombing and gunnery range facilities on Matagorda Island. In May 1954, however, the 559th again deployed to Japan on temporary duty to Misawa Air Base. One of the most important operations during this second tour of duty in the Far East was a series of exercises in which the capabilities of the Northern Air Defense Area were tested. The wing returned to the United States again in August 1954. While stationed at Bergstrom Air Force Base during the next several years the 559th continued to accomplish the usual training programs and routine training missions. There were, however, a number of special missions and other activities. In June 1955 the unit participated in weapons loading exercise and unit simulated combat mission at Gray Air Force Base, Texas. Operating from the forward staging base (Gray AFB), F-84s of the 559th were scheduled to destroy a number of targets simulated on Matagorda Island. On this mission the Thunderjets accomplished air refueling over Roswell, New Mexico. Meanwhile, in May 1955 the 12th Strategic Fighter Wing was selected to represent the Strategic Air Command in the annual fighter competition to be held in connection with the USAF Gunnery Meet in September 1955 at Nellis Air Force Base, Nevada. A group of candidates began training on Matagorda Island in June. Selected for the competition were two officers from the 12th Wing headquarters, and one each from the 559th, 560th, and 561st Squadrons. Competing at Nellis in September against this special team from the Strategic Air Command were other teams from the Air Defense Command, Far East Air Forces, Tactical Air Command, and United States Air Forces in Europe. At the meet the Strategic Air Command took third place, running behind those of the Far East Air Forces and the United States Air Forces in Europe. Additionally, during the early part of May 1956 the 559th began participation with the 560th in the deployment of 25 F-84s for approximately 90 days at Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska. The purpose of the operation was to furnish a competent fighter offensive within the Alaskan Air Command. In addition to carrying out routine aircrew training, while at Eielson the detachment took part in several Fifteenth Air Force emergency war plan missions. At the conclusion of the temporary duty in Alaska the detachment flew nonstop back to its home base. The 27th Air refueling Squadron provided in-flight refueling for the redeployment. Plans announced at Bergstrom as early as April 1956 indicated that in due course of time the 559th would convert to the long-range F-101 Voodoo. A tentative schedule for equipping with the F-101 was set for May through October 1957. Training in the new aircraft for aircrews and maintenance personnel of the wing began at Bergstrom in November 1956. This training was discontinued after about a month, however, following a decision by higher headquarters not to equip the wing with the F-101 aircraft. Effective 1 July 1957, the 559th was redesignated a fighter-day squadron and assigned to the Tactical Air Command. The wing and its squadrons were inactivated, however, on 8 January 1958.
[ "Cessna T-37B 87999 12 FTW Rand 17.10.75 edited-3.jpg" ]
[ "History", "Strategic fighter operations" ]
[ "Flying training squadrons of the United States Air Force", "Military units and formations in Texas" ]
projected-20467597-005
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/559th%20Flying%20Training%20Squadron
559th Flying Training Squadron
Tactical fighter operations
The 559th Flying Training Squadron is part of the 12th Flying Training Wing based at Randolph Air Force Base, Texas. It operates the Beechcraft T-6 Texan II conducting flying training.
On 17 April 1962 the 559th Fighter-Day Squadron was redesignated the 559th Tactical Fighter Squadron. At the same time it was activated and assigned to the Tactical Air Command. Effective 25 April 1962, the squadron was organized at MacDill Air Force Base, Florida, with further assignment to the 12th Tactical Fighter Wing. The squadron augmented air defenses of Okinawa from, June–September 1965 and participated in combat operations over Southeast Asia from, 2 January 1966 – 23 March 1970.
[]
[ "History", "Tactical fighter operations" ]
[ "Flying training squadrons of the United States Air Force", "Military units and formations in Texas" ]
projected-20467597-006
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/559th%20Flying%20Training%20Squadron
559th Flying Training Squadron
Flying training
The 559th Flying Training Squadron is part of the 12th Flying Training Wing based at Randolph Air Force Base, Texas. It operates the Beechcraft T-6 Texan II conducting flying training.
The unit was redesignated the 559th Flying Training Squadron in 1972, located at Randolph AFB, Texas, initially operating the Cessna T-37 jet trainer. It has since trained US and friendly nation instructor aircrews from May 1972 to the present time.
[]
[ "History", "Flying training" ]
[ "Flying training squadrons of the United States Air Force", "Military units and formations in Texas" ]
projected-20467597-007
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/559th%20Flying%20Training%20Squadron
559th Flying Training Squadron
Operations
The 559th Flying Training Squadron is part of the 12th Flying Training Wing based at Randolph Air Force Base, Texas. It operates the Beechcraft T-6 Texan II conducting flying training.
World War II Vietnam War
[]
[ "History", "Operations" ]
[ "Flying training squadrons of the United States Air Force", "Military units and formations in Texas" ]
projected-20467597-008
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/559th%20Flying%20Training%20Squadron
559th Flying Training Squadron
Lineage
The 559th Flying Training Squadron is part of the 12th Flying Training Wing based at Randolph Air Force Base, Texas. It operates the Beechcraft T-6 Texan II conducting flying training.
Constituted as the 81st Bombardment Squadron (Light) on 20 November 1940 Activated on 15 January 1941 Redesignated 81st Bombardment Squadron (Medium) on 30 December 1941 Redesignated 81st Bombardment Squadron, Medium on 9 October 1944 Inactivated on 22 January 1946 Redesignated 81st Bombardment Squadron, Light on 29 April 1947 Activated on 19 May 1947 Inactivated on 10 September 1948 Redesignated 559th Fighter-Escort Squadron on 27 October 1950 Activated on 1 November 1950 Redesignated 559th Strategic Fighter Squadron on 20 January 1953 Redesignated 559th Fighter-Day Squadron on 1 July 1957 Inactivated on 8 January 1958 Redesignated 559th Tactical Fighter Squadron and activated on 17 April 1962 (not organized) Organized on 25 April 1962 Inactivated on Inactivated on 31 March 1970 Redesignated 559th Flying Training Squadron on 22 March 1972 Activated on 1 May 1972
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[ "Lineage" ]
[ "Flying training squadrons of the United States Air Force", "Military units and formations in Texas" ]