Tag Archives: World War II

Gordon Welchman

5 Feb

Gordon Welchman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(William) Gordon Welchman (15 June 1906, Bristol, England – 8 October 1985, Newburyport, Massachusetts) was a British-American mathematician, university professor, World War IIcodebreaker at Bletchley Park, and author.

Contents

[hide]

  • 1 Education and early career
  • 2 At Bletchley Park
  • 3 After World War II
  • 4 See also
  • 5 References

[edit]Education and early career

Gordon Welchman studied Mathematics as a scholar at Trinity College, Cambridge from 1925 to 1928. In 1929 he became a Research Fellow in mathematics at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, a Fellow in 1932, and later Dean of the College.

[edit]At Bletchley Park

 

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Gio. Ansaldo & C.

5 Feb

Gio. Ansaldo & C.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, see Ansaldo (disambiguation).
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2013)
Ansaldo
Industry Engineering
Fate absorbed by Finmeccanica in 1993
Successor(s) AnsaldoBreda
Ansaldo Energia
Ansaldo STS
Founded 1853
Defunct 1993
Headquarters Italy
Products Transport aircraft
Bombers
Experimental planes
Air force trainers
Seaplanes
Ship
Locomotives

Ansaldo was one of Italy’s oldest and most important engineering companies, existing for 140 years from 1853 to 1993.

Contents

[hide]

  • 1 From foundation to World War I
  • 2 Fascism and World War II
  • 3 After World War II
  • 4 Ansaldo today
  • 5 Products
    • 5.1 Aircraft production
    • 5.2 Ships
    • 5.3 Rolling stock
      • 5.3.1 Locomotives
  • 6 See also
  • 7 References
  • 8 External links

[edit]From foundation to World War I

Ansaldo logo

 

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HMAS Kanimbla

5 Feb

HMAS Kanimbla

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Two ships of the Royal Australian Navy have been named HMAS Kanimbla, for the Kanimbla Valley in the Blue Mountains of New South Wales:

  • HMAS Kanimbla (F23), a passenger liner launched in 1935, requisitioned by the Royal Navy as an armed merchant cruiser in 1939, converted into a RAN landing ship in 1943, and returned to owners in 1950
  • HMAS Kanimbla (L 51), an amphibious transport ship acquired from the United States in 1994 and decommissioned in 2011

[edit]Battle honours

Ships named HMAS Kanimbla are entitled to carry seven battle honours:[1][2]

  • New Guinea 1944
  • Leyte Gulf 1944
  • Lingayen Gulf 1945
  • Borneo 1945
  • Pacific 1945
  • Persian Gulf 2001–03
  • Iraq 2003

[edit]References

  1. ^ “Navy Marks 109th Birthday With Historic Changes To Battle Honours”. Royal Australian Navy. 1 March 2010. Archived from the original on 13 June 2011. Retrieved 23 December 2012.
  2. ^ “Royal Australian Navy Ship/Unit Battle Honours”. Royal Australian Navy. 1 March 2010. Archived from the original on 14 June 2011. Retrieved 23 December 2012.
Schooner.svg List gray.svg This article includes a list of ships with the same or similar names. If an internal link for a specific ship led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended ship article, if one exists.
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Gloster Aircraft Company

5 Feb

Gloster Aircraft Company

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
“Gloster” redirects here. For the community in Kern County, California, see Actis, California.
Gloster Aircraft Company, Limited
Gloster logo.png
Industry Aviation
Fate Merged with Armstrong Whitworth (1961) and Avro(1963)
Successor(s) Hawker Siddeley Aviation
Founded 1917 (as Gloucestershire Aircraft Company)
Defunct 1963
Headquarters Hucclecote
Parent Hawker Aircraft (1934)

The Gloster Aircraft Company, Limited, known locally as GAC, was a British aircraft manufacturer. The company produced a famous lineage of fighters for the Royal Air Force (RAF): the Grebe, Gladiator, Meteor and Javelin. It also produced the Hawker Hurricane and Hawker Typhoon for the parent company Hawker Siddeley. Gloster produced the first British jet aircraft, the E.28/39, and the first British production jet fighter, the Meteor, the only Allied jet aircraft to see service in World War II.

Contents

[hide]

  • 1 History
    • 1.1 1934 – amalgamation
    • 1.2 1939 – World War II
    • 1.3 1941 – turbojet
    • 1.4 1945 – world record
    • 1.5 1947 – Gloster’s heyday
    • 1.6 1960s – demise
  • 2 Products
  • 3 Chief Test Pilots
  • 4 See also
  • 5 Notes
  • 6 References
  • 7 External links

[edit]History

The Gloster Aircraft Company was formed in 1917 as the Gloucestershire Aircraft Company. The company acquired the aircraft business previously carried out by H H Martyn with a 50% share, and the Aircraft Manufacturing Company the other 50%. The company rented what was the Sunningend works of H H Martyn in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire. A

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Pauline Morrow Austin

4 Feb

Pauline Morrow Austin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pauline Morrow Austin (1916 – August 29, 2011[1]) was an American meteorologist.

Austin received a BA from Wilson College in 1938, an MA from Smith College in 1939, and a PhD in Physics from MIT in 1942.

Austin began her career as a meteorologist during World War II. She was one of nine women recognized for wartime scientific and technical contributions.[2] She then worked at MIT as the Director of the weather radar, and as part of the research staff in the Radiation Laboratory. In addition she was associate editor for the Journal of Applied Meteorology.[3]

[edit]Personal life

Austin was married for 59 years to Dr. James Murdoch Austin, known for his modeling of the meteorology of air pollution. Their two daughters are Doris A. Price of Annapolis, Maryland and Carol T. West of Gainesville, Florida.

She currently volunteers at the Florida Museum of Natural History.

[edit]References

  1. ^ http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/obituaries/articles/2011/10/12/pauline_austin_developed_weather_radar_after_wwii/ Pauline Austin; developed weather radar after WWII
  2. ^ Wilson College. “Pauline Morrow Austin”. Retrieved 1 June 2011.
  3. ^ Bailey, Martha J. (1994). American Women in Science:A Biographical Dictionary. ABC-CLIO, Inc.. ISBN 0-87436-740-9.
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Wolfram von Soden

4 Feb

Wolfram von Soden

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wolfram Freiherr von Soden (19 June 1908, Berlin – 6 October 1996, Münster) was the most notable German Assyriologist of the post-World-War II era, in a discipline long dominated by German scholars and German scholarship.

[edit]Life and work

Born in Berlin, Wolfram von Soden was a gifted student of the ancient Semitic languages who studied under the noted Jewish Assyriologist, Benno Landsberger, at Leipzig and received his doctorate in 1931, at age 23, with his thesis Der hymnisch-epische Dialekt des Akkadischen (The Hymnic-Epic Dialect of Akkadian). In 1936, he was appointed a professor of Assyriology and Arabic studies, a new position, at the University of Göttingen. While his mentor, Landsberger, was obliged to leave Germany due to National-Socialist racial policy, von Soden joined theSturmabteilung (the SA, the so-called Brownshirts) in 1934. An ardent German nationalist, he never joined the NSDAP–the Nazi Party, but in 1944 the SA and its members were compulsorily integrated into the NSDAP, a fact that has led to certain American detractors portraying von Soden as a Nazi and anti-Semite, despite his personal ties to Landsberger.

From 1939 to 1945, von Soden served in the military, primarily as a translator, and in 1940 this work prevented him accepting the offer of a chair in Ancient Near Eastern studies at the Friedrich Wilhelm University in Berlin. Von Soden published significant works that implicitly supported Nazi cultural and racial policy.

Following the Second World War, von Soden’s former activities as an involuntary member of the Nazi Party initially barred his reentry to the teaching profession. Because of his extraordinary abilities, however, and thanks to his Doktorvater, Benno Landsberger, who wrote in his support, von Soden was appointed to an academic position at the University of Vienna in 1954. In 1961, he accepted the offer of a professorship at Münster, where he served as director of the Oriental Seminar until his retirement in 1976. At his death in 1996, he left his scholarly library to the newly revived Institute for Near Eastern Studies at the University of Leipzig, where he had earned his doctorate.

[edit]Scholarship

After World War II, von Soden became the pre-eminent scholar in the world in ancient Semitic languages, and his scholarship dominated the post World War II era. He was an integral member of the “history of religions” (Religionsgeschichte) school at Goettingen, and disproved the long-standing claim that the Babylonians had believed in a “dying, rising god”. His philological works, particularly the Akkadisches Handwoerterbuch (AHW), in which the Dutch scholar Rykle Borger assisted, laid the basis for the detailed philological contributions that later appeared in the Chicago Assyrian Dictionary. His Grundriss Akkadischer Grammatik (GAG) and the AHW remain the definitive foundational works of Assyriology today and establish von Soden as the dean of ancient Near Eastern Studies in the world.

No other single scholar has made a contribution to the modern understanding of ancient Semitic languages that comes even close to von Soden’s in the areas of philology

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British Columbia Pipers Association

4 Feb

British Columbia Pipers Association

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Crest and motto of the British Columbia Pi...

The Crest and motto of the British Columbia Pipers Association “TOG ORM MO PIOB” or “bring me my pipe” (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Crest and motto of the British Columbia Pipers Association “TOG ORM MO PIOB” or “bring me my pipe”

The British Columbia Pipers Association is a non-profit organization which sanctions all major bagpipe competitions in British Columbia, Washington, andOregon. It frequently partners with Scottish heritage groups and athletic organizations to organize Highland Games in these three states. Nine of these games, plus the Annual Gathering (an indoor piping and drumming competition with no other events) are sanctioned by the BCPA and produce aggregate points in solo piping and drumming, as well as pipe band competition, for an overall Grand Aggregate prize, announced at the end of each competition season.

[edit]History

From the settlement of Vancouver to the association’s founding in 1932 there had been a few attempts to establish a piping society, all of which had failed shortly after they were founded. However, there were a handful of pipe bands and annual games were put on by the Vancouver St. Andrews & Caledonian Society. Enthusiasts who felt that a more concrete organization was needed founded the BCPA in July 1932, and the first “Annual Gathering” took place in November of that year.

During World War II, several pipers were made unable to play for the duration, but several still improved markedly due to regular tuition by the Canadian and Imperial armies and upon demobilization these pipers made a lasting contribution to piping in British Columbia.

[edit]Grading Systems in the BCPA

The first annual gathering of the BCPA saw competitions organized into Novice, Ladies, Under 16, 16 and Over and Open (or Professional) divisions. This seemed logical at a time when women were thought to be weaker pipers than men. By the 1950s however, this notion was completely disproved by many excellent female pipers and in 1958 the non-professional competition was reorganized into Novice, Juvenile, Junior and Senior Amateur divisions. Finally, in 1995, the classes were changed to the more modern Grade 1, 2, 3 and 4, Grade 1 being the highest level, and even more recently Grade 5, beginner (practice chanter/practice pad), and adult (or bandsman) classifications have been added due to the large amount of participation at the lower levels of piping and drumming.

[edit]External links

  • Home page
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Minidoka

4 Feb

Minidoka

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Minidoka is a name of Dakota Sioux origin meaning “a fountain or spring of water”.[1] It is a name shared by several geographic locations in the Magic Valley region of southern Idaho in theUnited States:

  • Minidoka County, Idaho
  • Minidoka, Idaho, a town in Minidoka County
  • Minidoka Dam, located north of Acequia, Idaho
  • Minico High School (also known as Minidoka County High School), near Rupert, Idaho
  • Minidoka National Historic Site, an American concentration camp in Jerome County, Idaho, where Japanese Americans were imprisoned during World War II
  • Minidoka National Forest, a former U.S. national forest
  • Minidoka Ranger District, a district of Sawtooth National Forest
  • Minidoka Project, an irrigation project

[edit]References

  1. ^ THE NAME “MINIDOKA”,IDAHO STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY REFERENCE SERIES, Number 34, January 1995
Disambiguation icon This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title.
If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.

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Ignacy Sachs

4 Feb

Ignacy Sachs

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ignacy Sachs

Ignacy Sachs (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Ignacy Sachs

Ignacy Sachs (Warsaw, 1927) is a Polish, naturalized French economist. He is also said to be an ecosocioeconomist, due to his ideas about development as a combination of economic growth, equalitarian increase in social well-being and environmental preservation. The term ecosocioeconomy was created by Karl William Kapp, a German economist and one of the authors who inspired the so-called political economy during the 1970s.

Professor Sachs taught at University of Paris 12. Now Sachs is a invited researcher in the Institut of Advanced Studies in University of São Paulo – he lived inBrazil between 1941 and 1953 as a war refugee. He was one of the rare Jews who have returned to Poland (before his move to France) after the World War II; he did it due to his communist convictions.[1]

Contents

[hide]

  • 1 Biography
    • 1.1 Works published in Brazil and about Brazil
  • 2 Works about Ignacy Sachs
    • 2.1 Autobiography
  • 3 See also
  • 4 References
  • 5 External links

[edit]Biography

[edit]Works published in Brazil and about Brazil

  • Capitalismo de Estado e Subdesenvolvimento: Padrões de setor público em economias subdesenvolvidas. Petrópolis : Vozes. 1969.
  • Ecodesenvolvimento : crescer sem destruir. Trans. E. Araujo. – São Paulo: Vértice, 1981.
  • Espaços, tempos e estratégias do desenvolvimento. São Paulo: Vértice. 1986.
  • Histoire. culture et styles de développement : Brésil et Inde -esquisse de comparaison under the assessment of C. Comeliau and I. Sachs. L’Harmattan, UNESCO/CENTRAL, Paris.
  • Extractivismo na Amazônia brasileira: perspectivas sobre o desenvolvimento regional. Ed. M. Cllisener-Godt and Ignacy Sachs. -Paris: UNESCO, 1994; -96 pp. (Com
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Walter Kaner

4 Feb

Walter Kaner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Question book-new.svg
This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (January 2011)

Walter Kaner (May 5, 1920 – June 27, 2005) was an American journalist and philanthropist.

Contents

[hide]

  • 1 Early life
  • 2 Career in Journalism
  • 3 Walter Kaner Children’s Foundation
  • 4 Memorials
  • 5 External links

[edit]Early life

Kaner was born in New York City, one of three children of Philip and Ida Kaner. He grew up in New York City.

[edit]Career in Journalism

As “Tokyo Mose” during and after World War II, Kaner aired on US Army Radio, answering Tokyo Rose’s broadcasts. In occupied Japan, his “Moshi, Moshi Ano-ne” theme song, sung to the tune of “London Bridge is Falling Down,” was so popular with Japanese children and GIs alike that Stars and Stripes, the Army paper, called it “the Japanese occupation theme song.” Elsa Maxwell’s column and radio show in 1946 referred to Kaner as “the breath of home to unknown thousands of our young men when they were lonely.”

Following his discharge from the Army, Kaner was a columnist for the original daily Long Island Press (Not to be confused with the present-day alternative weekly of the same name), the New York Daily News, the Queens Gazette and other publications for more than 50 years.

He was married to Billie Elliot, who died on September 29, 2004. Kaner always referred to his wife in his columns as “Doll Face”.

Kaner once stood in for Ed Sullivan, jokingly reminding his television audience that he was the one who rejected acts such as Harry Belafonte and Barbra Streisand.

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