Construction in a - Almas Tower

Almas Tower (Diamond Tower) is a 360 metre (1,181 feet) tall skyscraper under construction in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Construction began in early 2005 and is scheduled for completion in 2008. When completed, it will have 74 floors, 70 of which will be commercial and 4 will be service floors.

The tower will be located on an artificial island in the centre of the Jumeirah Lake Towers development. The tower will be the tallest of all the buildings on the development when completed. It was designed by Atkins Middle East, an architecture company who have designed most of the JLT complex. The tower will then be constructed by the Taisei Corporation of Japan who were awarded the contract by Nakheel Properties on July 16, 2005. [1]

When completed, diamond cutting and exchange will take place there. Due to the type of transactions taking place at the tower, high security will be installed.


Photo Gallery

The Building

The Construction


See also

  • List of tallest buildings in Dubai


External links

  • Emporis.com - Building ID 210141
  • SkyscraperCity.com
  • DMCC entry
  • SkyscraperPage.com
  • Almas Tower - Development Profile

A shipyard - SembCorp Marine

SembCorp Marine Limited is part of SembCorp Industries, an Asian company based in Singapore. It is listed on the Singapore stock exchange or SGX and is part of the Straits Times Index there. The current President and CEO of SembCorp Marine is Mr Tan Kwi Kin.

SembCorp Marine’s services range a full spectrum of integrated ship repair, shipbuilding, ship conversion, rig building and offshore and marine engineering solutions.

SembCorp Marine offers its marine engineering facilities through a global network of strategically located shipyards in four hubs.

It has four strategic hubs located in:

1. Singapore: Jurong Shipyard, Sembawang Shipyard, PPL Shipyard, Jurong SML

2. China:
Cosco Shipyard Group

3. Brazil:
Mauá Jurong SA

4. Indonesia:
PT Karimun Sembawang Shipyard

(Its subsidiary PPL Shipyard also acquired Sabine Industries in Texas, Houston in October 2005)

Goalie - Chuck Rayner

Claude Earl “Chuck” Rayner (Born - August 11, 1920 in Sutherland, Saskatchewan, Canada - Died - October 5, 2002) was a Canadian professional hockey goaltender who played 9 seasons in the National Hockey League for the New York Americans and New York Rangers. He is an Honoured Member of the Hockey Hall of Fame.


Playing career

Playing his junior career for the Kenora Thistles of the Manitoba junior league, Rayner showed his skill early in backstopping the team to the Memorial Cup championship in 1940. The next season he turned professional for the Americans, spending most of the year with the Amerks’ minor league affiliate, the Springfield Indians of the AHL. With the Indians, Rayner led the league in shutouts and goals against average and was named to the Second All-Star Team.

The following season Rayner was the leading goalie for the Americans’ final season before folding. World War II interrupted Rayner’s career, however, and he spent the next three years in the Royal Canadian Navy, where he played two seasons for naval teams based out of Victoria.

After the war, he signed as a free agent in 1945 with the Rangers. Rayner would be the starting goaltender for New York six of the next seven seasons, earning accolades for his play even though the Rangers’ teams of the era were weak, and Rayner would never have a winning record. He was noted as a puckhandling goalie, attempting several times throughout his career to score a goal.

Even though he played on poor teams throughout his career, there was little doubt that “Bonnie Prince Charlie” was one of the best goalies of his era. The three years between 1948 and 1951 were his best, and he won the Hart Memorial Trophy as the NHL’s most valuable player in 1950, after leading the Rangers to overtime in the seventh game of the Stanley Cup finals.


Post-NHL career

In 1953, Rayner lost his job as Rangers’ starter to future Hall of Famer Gump Worsley. He played one more season in the minors for the Saskatoon Quakers of the Western Hockey League and a couple brief stints in the senior leagues the two seasons thereafter before hanging up his skates for good.

He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1973, only the second goaltender in history to be inducted with a losing record.


Awards & achievements

  • Named to the AHL Second All-Star Team in 1941.
  • Named to the NHL Second All-Star Team in 1949, 1950 and 1951.
  • Won the Hart Memorial Trophy in 1950.
  • Played in the NHL All-Star Game in 1949, 1950 and 1951.
  • Led the NHL in shutouts in 1947 with five.

1980 album - Invasion (album)

Invasion is the name of the first album released by the band Manilla Road. It was first published in 1980, and it was reissued in 2004 in a two-disc package with Metal on the second disc.


Track listing

  1. “The Dream Goes On” - 06:32
  2. “Cat and Mouse” - 08:19
  3. “Far Side of the Sun” - 08:09
  4. “Street Jammer” - 05:18
  5. “Centurion War Games” - 03:41
  6. “The Empire” 13:32


Credits

  • Mark Shelton - Lead vocals, guitars
  • Scott Park - Bass Guitar
  • Rick Fisher - Backing vocals, Drums and percussion

The proofs - Wallis product

In mathematics, Wallis’ product for π, written down in 1655 by John Wallis, states that

<math>

\prod_{n=1}^{\infty} \frac{(2n)(2n)}{(2n-1)(2n+1)} = \frac{2}{1} \cdot \frac{2}{3} \cdot \frac{4}{3} \cdot \frac{4}{5} \cdot \frac{6}{5} \cdot \frac{6}{7} \cdot \frac{8}{7} \cdot \frac{8}{9} \cdots = \frac{\pi}{2}.
</math>


Proof

First of all, consider the root of sin(x)/x is ±nπ, where n = 1, 2, 3, …
Then, we can express sine as an infinite product of linear factors given by its roots:

<math>

\frac{\sin(x)}{x} = k \left(1 - \frac{x}{\pi}\right)\left(1 + \frac{x}{\pi}\right)\left(1 - \frac{x}{2\pi}\right)\left(1 + \frac{x}{2\pi}\right)\left(1 - \frac{x}{3\pi}\right)\left(1 + \frac{x}{3\pi}\right) \cdots
</math>

where k is a constant.

To find the constant k, take the limit of both sides:

<math>

\lim_{x \to 0} \frac{\sin(x)}{x} = \lim_{x \to 0} \Bigg( k \left(1 - \frac{x}{\pi}\right)\left(1 + \frac{x}{\pi}\right)\left(1 - \frac{x}{2\pi}\right)\left(1 + \frac{x}{2\pi}\right)\left(1 - \frac{x}{3\pi}\right)\left(1 + \frac{x}{3\pi}\right) \cdots \Bigg) = k.
</math>

Using the fact that

<math>

\lim_{x \to 0} \frac{\sin(x)}{x} = 1,
</math> (proof)

we get k = 1. Then, we obtain the Euler-Wallis formula for sine:

<math>\begin{align}

\frac{\sin(x)}{x} &{}= \left(1 - \frac{x}{\pi}\right)\left(1 + \frac{x}{\pi}\right)\left(1 - \frac{x}{2\pi}\right)\left(1 + \frac{x}{2\pi}\right)\left(1 - \frac{x}{3\pi}\right)\left(1 + \frac{x}{3\pi}\right) \cdots \\
&{} = \frac{\sin(x)}{x} = \left(1 - \frac{x^2}{\pi^2}\right)\left(1 - \frac{x^2}{4\pi^2}\right)\left(1 - \frac{x^2}{9\pi^2}\right) \cdots.
\end{align}
</math>

Put x = π/2:

<math>

\frac{2}{\pi} = \left(1 - \frac{1}{2^2}\right)\left(1 - \frac{1}{4^2}\right)\left(1 - \frac{1}{6^2}\right) \cdots = \prod_{n=1}^{\infty} \left(1 - \frac{1}{4n^2}\right),
</math>

<math>\begin{align}

\frac{\pi}{2} &{}= \prod_{n=1}^{\infty} \left(\frac{4n^2}{4n^2 - 1}\right) \\
&{}= \prod_{n=1}^{\infty} \frac{(2n)(2n)}{(2n-1)(2n+1)} = \frac{2}{1} \cdot \frac{2}{3} \cdot \frac{4}{3} \cdot \frac{4}{5} \cdot \frac{6}{5} \cdot \frac{6}{7} \cdot \frac{8}{7} \cdot \frac{8}{9} \cdots.
\end{align}
</math>

Q.E.D.


Relation to Stirling’s approximation

Stirling’s approximation for n! asserts that

<math> n! = \sqrt {2\pi n} {\left(\frac{n}{e}\right)}^n \left( 1 + O\left(\frac{1}{n}\right) \right)</math>

as n → ∞. Consider now the finite approximations to the Wallis product, obtained by taking the first k terms in the product:

<math>

p_k = \prod_{n=1}^{k} \frac{(2n)(2n)}{(2n-1)(2n+1)} \ .
</math>
pk can be written as

<math>

p_k ={1\over{2k+1}}\prod_{n=1}^{k} \frac{(2n)^4 }{((2n)(2n-1))^2}={1\over{2k+1}}\cdot {{2^{4k}\,(k!)^4}\over {((2k)!)^2}} \ .
</math>

Substituting Stirling’s approximation in this expression (both for k! and (2k)!) one can deduce (after a short calculation) that pk converges to π/2 as k → ∞.


External link

  • PlanetMath page on complex analysis, including a proof of the infinite product

Three related - Soni

Soni may refer to:

  • Soni (language) - Indo-European language
  • Soni (Place) - Is Village in Taluka -Miraj, District - Sangli, State - Maharashtra, Country - India
  • Soni Malaj - Albanian female singer
  • Soni (Indian family name) - One of the family name related to Khatri (Punjabi adaptation of Sanskrit word Kshatriya) varnas.
  • Soni (Indian family name) - The people who make their earnings by working on anything related to gold. Mostly resident to Rajisthan state of India.
  • Ambika Soni
  • SONI- System Operator Northern Ireland (electricity)
See also: Sony

Saved album a - Time (album)

Time is the title of several albums:

  • Time (Electric Light Orchestra album)
  • Time (Steeleye Span album)
  • Time (Lionel Richie album)
  • Time (The Revelator) by Gillian Welch
  • Time (Mercyful Fate album)
  • Time (Wintersun album)
  • Time (Third Day album)
  • Time (Richard Carpenter album)
  • Time (Ardijah album)
  • Time (Klinik album)
  • Time (Peter Andre album)
  • Time (Wild album)
  • Time (Arashi album)

Dylan Saved Swans - Chronicles, Vol. 1

Chronicles, Vol. 1 ISBN 0-7432-2815-4], is the first part of Bob Dylan’s planned, 3-volume memoir. Published on October 5, 2004 by Simon & Schuster, the 304 page volume covers selected points from Dylan’s long career. The book spent 19 weeks on the New York Times best-seller list for hardcover nonfiction books.[1]

The abridged audio version of the book is read by actor Sean Penn. The unabridged version is read by Nick Landrum.

Chronicles, Vol. 1 was one of five finalists for the National Book Critics Circle Award in the Biography/Autobiography category for the 2004 publishing year. [2]

In an interview conducted by Jonathan Lethem, published in Rolling Stone, Dylan said he was very moved by the book’s reception. “Most people who write about music, they have no idea what it feels like to play it. But with the book I wrote, I thought, ‘The people who are writing reviews of this book, man, they know what the hell they’re talking about.’ It spoils you … they know more about it than me. The reviews of this book, some of ’em almost made me cry—in a good way. I’d never felt that from a music critic ever.”

Edward VI Five Ways - List of Prince Edward Island parishes

This is a list of parishes for the Canadian province of Prince Edward Island.


Prince County

  • North Parish
  • Egmont Parish
  • Halifax Parish
  • Richmond Parish
  • St. David’s Parish


Queens County

  • Greenville Parish
  • Hillsboro Parish
  • Charlotte Parish
  • Bedford Parish
  • St. John’s Parish


Kings County

  • St. Mary’s Parish
  • St. Patrick’s Parish
  • East Parish
  • St. George’s Parish
  • St. Andrew’s Parish

Places called - List of places in New York

These lists of current cities, towns, unincorporated communities, counties, and other recognized places in the U.S. state of New York. They also include information on the number and names of counties in which the places lie and their lower and upper zip code bounds, if applicable.


References

  • USGS Fips55 database


See also

  • List of villages in New York
  • List of cities in New York
  • List of towns in New York
  • List of census-designated places in New York
  • List of counties in New York

Scientists WAYS AM an - Abkhazian Regional Academy of Sciences

Abkhazian Regional Academy of Sciences (ARAS), independent scientific and educational organization, was founded in 1995, in Tbilisi (Republic of Georgia), by the group of famous scientists - refugees from Abkhazia. Academicians and Corresponding Members of ARAS are leading scientists of Georgia, representatives of social and humanitarian sciences, natural and life sciences, technical sciences and modern technologies. The Academy is registered by the Ministry of Justice of Georgia and recognized by the Georgian Academy of Sciences. The Presidium of the Academy is based in Tbilisi.

Aquinas see: Quinquae - Frederick Copleston

Fr. Frederick Charles Copleston, S.J. (April 10, 1907, Taunton, Somerset, England – February 3, 1994, London, England) was a Jesuit priest and writer on philosophy.

Copleston’s family was Anglican (his uncle was a bishop of Calcutta), but he converted to Roman Catholicism while a pupil at Marlborough College, and became a Jesuit in 1930. He studied and later lectured at Heythrop College and, seeing the poor standard of philosophical teaching in seminaries, he was author of an influential nine-volume History of Philosophy (1946-75), which is highly respected by secular parties.

He is well known for debating the existence of God with Bertrand Russell in a celebrated 1948 BBC broadcast; the following year he debated logical positivism and the meaningfulness of religious language with his friend the analytic philosopher A. J. Ayer.

One of Copleston’s most significant contributions to modern philosophy was his work on the theories of St Thomas Aquinas. He attempted to clarify Aquinas’ ‘Five Ways’ (in the Summa Theologica) by making a distinction between ‘in fieri’ causes and ‘in esse’ causes. By doing so Copleston makes clear that Aquinas wanted to put forth the concept of an omnipresent God rather than a being that could have disappeared after setting the chain of cause and effect into motion.

From 1952 Copleston spent some of his teaching time at the Gregorian University in Rome, continuing to lecture at Heythrop until it joined the University of London system in 1970, whereupon he became the College Principal. After officially retiring in 1974 he continued to lecture overseas, especially at Santa Clara University in California. He was appointed a member of the British Academy in 1970 and CBE in 1993.


Quotes

  • Even if the actual systems of philosophy which have appeared in the philosophical thought of a given culture are historically conditioned, there may be ways of thought exemplified by past systems which remain a feature of a people’s mentality or cultural outlook.
  • If one refuses to sit down and make a move, you cannot be checkmated (in relation to Russell’s stubborn belief about the existence of the universe).


Bibliography

  • A History of Philosophy, vols. 1-8. Burns Oates & Washbourne, 1946-66; vol. 9, Search Press, 1975.

  • Aquinas. Penguin, 1955.
  • Contemporary Philosophy: Studies of Logical Positivism and Existentialism. Continuum, 1956.
  • Philosophies and Cultures. Oxford University Press, 1980. ISBN 0-19-213960-6
  • Religion and the One: Philosophies East and West Search Press, 1982. ISBN 0-85532-510-0


External links

  • The BBC debate

In a shipyard - Jaguar class fast attack craft

The Type 140 Jaguar class fast attack craft is an evolution of the German torpedo boats (E boats) of World War II. The Type 141 Seeadler fast attack craft differs from the Type 140 only in the Type of engines.

The Jaguar class boats were replaced in service with the Bundesmarine by the Type 148 Tiger class fast attack craft.


Specifications

  • Length: 42.5m
  • Beam: 7m
  • Draft: 2.2m
  • Displacement: 183.4t
  • Propulsion:
    • 4 Mercedes-Benz MB 518 B diesel engines, 3000PS each
    • 4 propeller shafts, driving three-bladed propellers of 1.15m diameter
    • Bunker: 25t fuel, 1.12t lubricants, 2t fresh water
    • Range:700nms at 35kts
    • Speed:42kts max, 39kts max sustained
  • Sensors
    • Navigation radar
    • Surveillance radar
  • Armament:
    • 2 Bofors 40mm gun, 3168 rounds of ammunition
    • 4 533mm torpedo tubes, 4 torpedoes
    • Minelaying capabilities: The aft 2 torpedo tubes can be exchanged with 2 ramps for 23 naval mines Mk 2
    • 4 depth charges
  • Complement:
    • 39 officers and enlisted(?)


List of boats

NATO
pennant
number
German
pennant
number
Name Com-
missioned
Decom-
missioned
Fate
P6059 S1 Jaguar November 161957 June 221973 sold to private shipyard
P6058 S2 Iltis December 191957 January 311975 Used as target ship, then to Turkish Navy for cannibalization
P6062 S3 Wolf February 121958 March 211975 To Turkish Navy as P335 Kalkan
P6061 S4 Luchs March 271957 December 11972 sold to private company
P6060 S5 Leopard May 201958 May 281973 sold to private shipyard
P6065 S12 Löwe February 51959 April 251975 To Turkish Navy as P332 Kilic
P6066 S13 Fuchs March 171959 July 131973 sold to private shipyard
P6067 S14 Marder July 71959 June 221972 sold to private shipyard
P6082 S15 Weihe October 281959 July 51972 To France as target ship, sunk
P6083 S16 Kranich December 191959 November 21973 Museum ship in Bremerhaven, scrapped 2006
P6085 S17 Storch March 121960 March 291974 To Turkish Navy as P331 Tufan
P6087 S18 Häher April 51960 December 151974 To Turkish Navy as P333 Mizrak
P6088 S19 Elster July 81960 July 191974 sold to private shipyard
P6089 S20 Reiher August 151960 August 211973 To Turkish Navy, for cannibalization?
P6091 S21 Dommel February 41961 March 221974 sold to private shipyard
P6090 S22 Pinguin March 281961 December 141972 To Turkish Navy as P336 Karayel
P6063 S23 Tiger October 151958 December 201974 To Turkish Navy as P334 Yildiz
P6064 S24 Panther December 121958 March 11973 sold to private shipyard
P6084 S29 Alk January 141960 August 61974 To Turkish Navy, for cannibalization?
P6086 S30 Pelikan March 301960 May 311974 To Turkish Navy, P330 Firtina


References

  • Schnellboot Typ 140 Jaguar-Klasse @ schnellboot.net

Georgia. The term - Tom Murphy (U.S. politician)

Thomas Bailey “Tom” Murphy (b. March 10, 1924) of Georgia was Speaker of the Georgia House of Representatives from 1973 till his defeat in the general election of 2002, making him the longest serving Speaker in the history of the state. Murphy was a Democrat first elected to the Georgia House in 1960 and represented the western Georgia town of Bremen. He is an attorney by trade and a graduate of the University of Georgia.


References

  • New Georgia Encyclopedia entry for Tom Murphy

Ways. - Five Ways

For the proofs of God’s existence by Saint Thomas Aquinas see:

  • Quinquae viae

There are two places called Five Ways.

  • Five Ways, Birmingham
  • Five Ways, Victoria

Alternatively you might be looking for the school:

  • King Edward VI Five Ways

For slipway. A - Wallsend Slipway & Engineering Company

Wallsend Slipway & Engineering Company Ltd was formerly an independent company, located on the River Tyne at Point Pleasant, near Wallsend, Tyne & Wear, around a mile downstream from the Swan Hunter shipyard, with which it later merged.

It was formed as ‘The Wallsend Slipway Co’ in November 1871 by a group of Newcastle shipowners, and one shipbuilder, to repair the vessels of their respective fleets, hence the name ‘Slipway’. In 1874 Willam Boyd was appointed managing director and it was Boyd who introduced marine engine building to the firm - this becoming over the next decade its most important activity - which brought the words ‘Engineering’ into the full title of the firm which then became ‘ The Wallsend Slipway and Engineering Co Ltd’.

The company manufactured Parsons turbines under license for ships including the famous RMS Mauretania and numerous British warships.

Latterly, the yard was owned by British Shipbuilders. Today, the site is owned by AMEC, who operated it as an offshore facility until placing it in mothballs in January 2005. It was announced in June 2005 that the site was to be sold, probably for redevelopment.

WAYS may stand for: - Five Ways Tower

Five Ways Tower is a commercial building in Birmingham, England. It is situated on Frederick Road, near to the Five Ways roundabout, in Edgbaston. Many companies work in the tower. These are mainly smaller companies.

The building’s architect was Philip Bright.


See also

  • List of highrise buildings in Birmingham, UK


External links

  • Emporis entry
  • Skyscrapernews entry

And Mozambique - Inhambane

Inhambane is a city located in southern Mozambique, lying on Inhambane Bay. It is the capital of the Inhambane Province and has a population of 77,000.

Founded by Swahili traders, the town grew as a slave port and ivory trading centre in the eighteenth century under mostly Indian control. It was destroyed in 1834 by Soshangane, but grew rapidly in the second half of the century, from which period its cathedral and old mosque date. A railway wad constructed, but it later declined.

The city is now home to a museum and a market and is known for its nearby beaches of Tofo and Barra. Motor and dhow taxis sail from the town to Maxixe.

Säve Flygplats - Tabloid Magazine

Tabloid Magazine” is the third single lifted from The Living End’s gold and Top 5 album, Modern Artillery.It features a live version of the classic “All Torn Down”, plus acoustic versions of “Who’s Gonna Save Us” and “What Would You Do” and a previously unreleased track.

On the title track frontman Chris Cheney writes, “I have a weak spot for these mags. I am fascinated at the social preoccupation with reading about other people’s lives. They lure you in and become difficult to put down. I think it has a new wave kinda edge”.


Track listing

  1. “Tabloid Magazine”
  2. “No Reaction” (Demo)
  3. “All Torn Down” (Live)
  4. “What Would You Do?” (Acoustic)
  5. “Who’s Gonna Save Us?” (Acoustic)

Also an alternative name - Cellular checkpoint

  1. Redirect Cell cycle checkpoint 

This is a redirect from a title that is an alternative name, a pseudonym, a nick name or a synonym.

It leads to the title in accordance with the naming conventions for common names and can help writing.

For more information, follow the category link.

Slipway. A - British Shipbuilders

British Shipbuilders Corporation was a public corporation that owned and managed the UK shipbuilding industry from 1977 and through the 1980s.

The corporation was founded as a result of the Aircraft and Shipbuilding Industries Act 1977 which nationalised all major British shipbuilding companies. The same act nationalised the three large British aviation companies and grouped them in an analogous corporation, British Aerospace.

Harland & Wolff, the only shipbuilder based in Northern Ireland was a special political case and remained out with the control of the British Shipbuilders management, despite being in its ownership. British Shipbuilders was privatised in 1983 under the terms of the British Shipbuilders Act 1983. The various divisions that had survived under nationalised ownership were divested throughout the 1980s as the company wound up operations.

The British Shipbuilders Corporation continues to exist in statute DTI | Managing Government Assets and Liabilities in order to be accountable for any liabilities incurred during its operational history.


Assets subsumed by British Shipbuilders

  • Ailsa Shipbuilding Company, Troon (acquired in 1978, merged with Ferguson Shipbuilders to form Ferguson-Ailsa in 1981, assets transferred to Scott Lithgow)
  • Austin & Pickersgill, Sunderland
  • John Brown & Company, Clydebank
  • Cammell Laird and Company, Birkenhead
  • William Doxford and Sons, Pallion
  • Ferguson Shipbuilders, Port Glasgow (merged with Ailsa in 1981 to form Ferguson-Ailsa)
  • Falmouth Docks Company, Falmouth
  • Govan Shipbuilders, Govan
  • R & H Green & Silley Weir and London Graving Dock Company, London (as River Thames Ship Repairers, later renamed Blackwall Engineering)
  • Hall Russell & Company, Aberdeen
  • Harland and Wolff, Belfast (nationalised but outwith the management of British Shipbuilders)
  • Hawthorn Leslie and Company, Hebburn
  • Northwestern Ship Repairers and Shipbuilding Limited (NSL), Merseyside
  • John Readhead and Sons, South Shields
  • Scott Lithgow, Greenock
  • Robb Caledon Shipbuilders, Leith and Dundee
  • Smiths Dock Company, Middlesbrough
  • Swan Hunter Shipbuilders Limited , Wallsend (later renamed Swan Hunter)
  • Vickers Limited Shipbuilding Group, Barrow in Furness (later renamed Vickers Shipbuilding and Engineering Limited - VSEL)
  • Vosper Thornycroft, Woolston and Portsmouth
  • Wallsend Slipway and Engineering Company, Wallsend
  • Yarrow Shipbuilders (YSL), Scotstoun


Denationalisation

  • Cammell Laird - 1986 - as a subsidiary of VSEL, finished shipbuilding 1993, now part of NSL
  • Ferguson Ailsa - 1986 - split and sold, Ailsa to Perth Corporation as Ailsa Perth Shipbuilders and Ferguson to Appledore Shipbuilders as Appledore Ferguson
  • Govan Shipbuilders - 1988 - sold to Kværner as Kværner (Govan), to GEC-Marconi 1999 as part of Marconi Marine then to BAE Systems as part of BAE Systems Marine, now BAE Systems Naval Ships
  • Scott Lithgow - 1981 - individual operating companies dissolved, sold to Trafalgar House in 1984, closed 2003
  • Swan Hunter - ? - to receivership 1994, bought by Jaap Kroese
  • YSL - 1985 - sold to GEC-Marconi as Marconi Marine (YSL) then to BAE Systems as part of BAE Systems Marine, now BAE Systems Naval Ships
  • Vosper Thornycroft - 1985 - management buyout, now known as VT Group
  • VSEL - 1986 - with Cammell Laird as a subsidiary. Acquired by GEC-Marconi in 1995 as part of Marconi Marine, then to BAE Systems as part of BAE Systems Marine, now BAE Systems Submarines
  • Harland and Wolff - 1989


The evolution of British Shipbuilders


References

The ways. If - All the Myriad Ways

All the Myriad Ways is a collection of short stories and essays by science fiction author Larry Niven, originally published in 1971. It contains:

  • “All the Myriad Ways”
  • “Passerby”
  • “For a Foggy Night”
  • “Wait it Out”
  • “The Jigsaw Man”
  • “Not Long Before the End”
  • “Unfinished Story #1″
  • “Unfinished Story #2″
  • “Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex”
  • “Exercise in Speculation: The Theory and Practice of Teleportation
  • “The Theory and Practice of Time Travel”
  • “Inconstant Moon” (Made into an Outer Limits episode)
  • “What Can You Say About Chocolate Covered Manhole Covers?”
  • “Becalmed in Hell”

In the eponymous story contained within, Niven attempted to craft a response to stories featuring the many-worlds interpretation as a key plot point, taking the social implications of infinite realities to a depressing conclusion.

All the Myriad Ways features the essay Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex, a humorous discussion of the difficulties Superman might encounter in trying to conceive a child with Lois Lane.

An alternative - Cell checkpoint

  1. Redirect Cell cycle checkpoint 

This is a redirect from a title that is an alternative name, a pseudonym, a nick name or a synonym.

It leads to the title in accordance with the naming conventions for common names and can help writing.

For more information, follow the category link.

River in - New River

The New River may refer to:

  • The New River (England), a man-made watercourse in England
  • The New River (Belize), a river that flows north into the Chetumal Bay

In the United States:

  • The New River (California), which flows into the Salton Sea
  • The New River (Trinity River), a tributary of the Trinity River in northern California
  • The New River (northern Florida), a tributary of the Santa Fe River
  • The New River (southern Florida), a channel which drains the Everglades
  • The New River (New Hampshire), a tributary of the Ellis River on Mount Washington
  • The New River (North Carolina), which flows into the Atlantic Ocean in southeastern North Carolina
  • The New River (Oregon) in Southwestern Oregon, parallels the Pacific Ocean between Coos Bay and Port Orford
  • The New River (South Carolina), which flows into the Atlantic Ocean in southeastern South Carolina near the the Savannah River
  • The New River (Tennessee), a tributary of the Cumberland River in Tennessee
  • The New River (Kanawha River), a tributary of the Ohio River via the Kanawha River, in North Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia
    • New River Gorge National River, protecting a portion of the West Virginia river
  • New River, Arizona, a region in the Phoenix, Arizona metropolitan area, named after the seasonal New River Wash

Also:

  • Marine Corps Air Station New River, near Jacksonville, North Carolina

Europe - Gallup

Gallup can refer to:

  • Gallup poll, an opinion poll conducted by The Gallup Organization
  • Gallup, New Mexico
  • George Gallup, a pollster who founded the Gallup Organization
  • Gordon G. Gallup, a psychologist known for his mirror test used to test self-awareness ability in animals and young humans


See also

  • Gallup Europe
  • The Gallup Organisation Europe
  • Gallop

Drama - List of Chinese television shows

  • Kewang ( English: Yearning) Early 1990’s drama
  • Kuaile Dabenying (Happy Citadel) Gameshow on Hunan Satellite TV
  • Lailai Wangwang (Busy Life) Drama
  • Kong Jingzi (Empty Mirror) Drama
  • General Manager Liu Laogen Drama

Baseball - Juan Castillo (baseball player)

Juan Francisco Castillo [cas-TEEL-lyo] (born June 23, 1970 in Caracas, Venezuela) is a former Major League Baseball right-handed relief pitcher who played for the New York Mets (1994).

Castillo compiled a career 0-0 record with 17 strikeouts and a 6.94 of ERA in 11 innings.


See also

  • List of players from Venezuela in Major League Baseball


External links

  • Career statistics at Baseball Reference

Looking for the school: - Albuquerque Public Schools

Albuquerque Public Schools is a school district based in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

In 2005 it had a total of 127 schools with some 86,560 students. It had 80 elementary, 26 middle and 12 high schools, as well as 10 alternative schools.


Magnet schools


Science and technology related

  • Zuni Elementary School
  • Grant Middle School
  • Hayes Middle School
  • Highland High School
  • Inez Elementary School
  • John Adams Middle School
  • John Baker (runner) Elementary School
  • La Mesa Elementary School
  • Lavaland Elementary School
  • Madison Middle School
  • Mary Ann Binford Elementary School
  • Sandia High School
  • Sombre del Monte Elementary School
  • Truman Middle School
  • Osuna Elementary School
  • Van Buren Middle School
  • West Mesa High School
  • Zuni Elementary School


Other

  • Communications

    • Barcelona Elementary School
    • Polk Middle School
    • Rio Grande High School
  • Career-related
    • Bel-Air Elementary School
    • Del Norte High School
    • Duranes Elementary School
    • Garfield Middle School
    • McKinley Middle School
    • Valley High School
  • Leadership and international studies
    • Albuquerque High School
    • East San Jose Elementary School
    • Washington Middle School
  • Community
    • Lew Wallace Elementary School
  • Fine arts and Spanish.
    • Longfellow Elementary School


External links

  • Albuquerque Public Schools

Resources

Ways to save for college - Collingwood College

Collingwood College may mean:

  • Collingwood College, Victoria, an Australian state Prep to year 12 school
  • Collingwood College, Durham, college of Durham University, England
  • Collingwood College, Surrey, State Secondary Comprehensive technology college in Camberley, England

Resources

A pitcher - Bill Lee

Bill Lee may refer to:

  • Bill Lee (author), Chinese American writer and ex-gang member
  • Bill Lee (Duke Power), ex-Chairman of the Board of Duke Power
  • Bill Lee (musician) (born 1928), American jazz musician and composer
  • Bill Lee (left-handed pitcher) (born 1946), American baseball pitcher, nicknamed “Spaceman”
  • Bill Lee (right-handed pitcher), baseball pitcher who played in the National League 1934-1947
  • Billy Lee (outfielder), baseball outfielder who played in the American League 1915-1916
  • Bill Lee (television producer), vice president at Dick Clark Productions
  • Bill Lee (Stargate), fictional character in the television series Stargate SG-1 and Stargate Atlantis
  • William C. Lee (1895–1948), American Army soldier and general
  • William S. Burroughs (1914–1997), American novelist and essayist, who used ‘Bill Lee’ as a pen name and for several characters


See also

  • William Lee
  • Bill Lam Lee, acting assistant attorney general for civil rights in the Clinton Administration.

Resources

Proofs of - Proof by exhaustion

This article is about the type of mathematical proof. For the method of calculating limits, see Method of exhaustion.

Proof by exhaustion, also known as proof by cases, perfect induction, or the brute force method, is a method of mathematical proof in which the statement to be proved is split into a finite number of cases, and each case is proved separately. A proof by exhaustion contains two stages:

  • A proof that the cases are exhaustive; i.e., that each instance of the statement to be proved matches the conditions of (at least) one of the cases.
  • A proof of each of the cases.

In contrast, the method of exhaustion of Eudoxus of Cnidus was a geometrical and essentially rigorous way of calculating mathematical limits.


Example

To prove that every cube number is either a multiple of 9 or 1 more or 1 less than a multiple of 9.

Proof:

Each cube number is the cube of some integer n. This integer n is either a multiple of 3, or 1 more or 1 less than a multiple of 3. So these 3 cases are exhaustive:

  • Case 1: If n = 3p, then n³ = 27p³, which is a multiple of 9.
  • Case 2: If n = 3p+1, then n³ = 27p³+27p²+9p+1, which is 1 more than a multiple of 9. For instance, if n = 4 then n³ = 64 = 9×7+1.
  • Case 3: If n = 3p−1, then n³ = 27p³−27p²+9p−1, which is 1 less than a multiple of 9. For instance, if n = 5 then n³ = 125 = 9×14−1.


How many cases?

There is no upper limit to the number of cases allowed in a proof by exhaustion. Sometimes there are only two or three cases. Sometimes there may be thousands or even millions. For example, rigorously solving an endgame puzzle in chess might involve considering a very large number of possible positions in the game tree of that problem.

The first proof of the four colour theorem was a proof by exhaustion with 1,936 cases. This proof was controversial because the majority of the cases were checked by a computer program, not by hand. The shortest known proof of the four colour theorem today still has over 600 cases.

Mathematicians prefer to avoid proofs with large numbers of cases.
Such proofs feel inelegant to them. A proof with a large number of cases leaves an impression that the theorem is only true by coincidence, and not because of some underlying principle or connection.
Other types of proofs — such as proof by induction (mathematical induction) — are considered more elegant.
However, there are some important theorems for which no other method of proof has been found.

As well as the four colour theorem, other examples of large proofs by exhaustion are:

  • The proof that there is no finite projective plane of order 10.
  • The classification of finite simple groups.
  • The Kepler conjecture.


See also

  • Case analysis
  • Computer-assisted proof

Series a - Now That’s What I Call Music! 21

Now That’s What I Call Music! 21 may refer to at least two different “Now That’s What I Call Music!”-series albums, including:

  • Now That’s What I Call Music! 21 (original UK series, 1992 release)
  • Now That’s What I Call Music! 21 (U.S. series, 2006 release)

Resources

King Edward VI Five - Edward Howard

This may refer to:

  • A centenarian Roman Catholic archbishop in Oregon; see Edward Howard (bishop)
  • Early naval commander and Lord High Admiral; see Edward Howard (admiral)
  • The 1800 winner of the Copley Medal; see Edward Howard (scientist)
  • Edward Howard (1813-1904), was one of the earliest time-piece makers in US history and the founder of E. Howard & Co..

Resources

Bond Saved - Fixed rate bond

In finance, a fixed rate bond is a bond with a fixed coupon (interest) rate, as opposed to a floating rate note. A fixed rate bond is a long term debt paper that carries a predetermined interest rate. The interest rate is known as coupon rate and interest is payable at specified dates before bond maturity.

Resources

Existence by - Sicilian Briton

The Sicilian Briton was an early 5th century Christian theologian known for his egalitarianism. He came from Britain and wrote in Sicily, but his name is unknown.

He wrote six pamphlets, all on the text “If you would be perfect, go, sell what you possess and give to the poor” (Matthew 19:21). In his best known work, De Divitiis (”On Riches”), he blamed the existence of poverty on the existence of wealth. He divided people into three categories: the rich, the poor, and those who have enough, and advocated redistributing the excess wealth of the rich so that everyone has enough. This was summarised in the slogan: tolle divitem et pauperum non invenies (”abolish the rich and you will find no more poor”). His views can be considered an early form of socialism.

He was associated with his fellow Briton Pelagius, although Pelagius distanced himself from the Sicilian Briton’s more radical doctrines.


References

  • John Morris (1973), The Age of Arthur

Resources

Undergoing construction - J.E. Dunn Construction Group

J.E. Dunn Construction Group is a privately owned construction company in the United States. In October 2006 the company was ranked 19th in Engineering News-Record Magazine’s top 400 contractors based on 2005 revenue of $2.3 billion. Some of the major projects J.E. Dunn has worked on include the Sprint Nextel corporate campus in Overland Park, Kansas, along with many others. J.E. Dunn has its headquarters in Kansas City. Along with having its headquarters in Kansas City, J.E. Dunn has offices in:

  • Topeka, Kansas
  • Austin, Texas
  • Dallas, Texas
  • Houston, Texas
  • Colorado Springs, Colorado
  • Denver, Colorado
  • Des Moines, Iowa
  • Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • Seattle, Washington
  • Portland, Oregon
  • Nashville, Tennessee
  • Charlotte, North Carolina
  • Atlanta, Georgia
  • Orlando, Florida


External links

  • J.E. Dunn Construction Group Official Web Site

Resources

Ship were scrapped there - HMS A11

HMS A11 was an early Royal Navy submarine.

She was a member of Group Two of the first British A-class of submarines (a second, much different A-class submarine appeared towards the end of the Second World War). As with the other members of her class, she was built at Vickers Barrow-in-Furness.


References


External link

  • MaritimeQuest HMS A-11 Pages

Resources

Victoria Alternatively you might - Mount Victoria

Mount Victoria can refer to one of a number of peaks named after Queen Victoria:

  • Mount Victoria, Auckland, New Zealand
  • Mount Victoria, Wellington, New Zealand
  • Mount Victoria, Burma, also known as Nat Ma Taung, in western Burma
  • Mount Victoria (Alberta) in Alberta, Canada
  • Mount Victoria, Papua New Guinea in the Owen Stanley Ranges, Papua New Guinea
  • Mount Victoria was the name of what is now known as Mount Tomanivi in Fiji

Mount Victoria can also refer to the township of:

  • Mount Victoria, New South Wales, Australia

Resources

AM radio - CINN-FM

CINN is a Canadian radio station, broadcasting at 91.1 FM in Hearst, Ontario.

Owned and operated by Radio de l’Épinette Noire cooperative, it is a non-profit community radio station for the region’s franco-ontarian community. CINN-FM began broadcasting in 1988.


External links

  • CINN

Saved TV series - Mahale

See also Mahale Mountains National Park

Mahale is a surname in Maharashtra, India. This surname was made famous by a warrior called Jiva Mahale. He was a bodyguard of legendary king Chhatrapati Shivaji.
Jiva Mahale saved Shivaji in a war against Afzal Khan who was a general of Nijam. This incident made a popular phrase in Marathi community “Jiva Saved Shiva”.

Resources

Alternatively you - Maitorieska

Maitorieska (=milk rieska, pronounce re-ehskuh, stress on the first syllable, no pause) is a barley-based bread that is a local specialty and a very traditional food in Ylivieska area in Finland.

For one bread, you need:

  • 1/4 liter milk
  • 1/3 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 - 1/3 liter barley flour

First, set oven to 300°C. Mix milk and salt, add flour. Mix the ingredients and knead into a flat, round bread (about 0.5 cm thick). Bake for about 15 minutes or until the surface gets some darker spots.

Alternatively, you can also fry it on a pan on the stove or on open fire.

Eat fresh with butter and a glass of cold milk.

Resources

Ways. Five Ways Birmingham - The Door (Theatre)

The Door is a flexible studio theatre seating between 140 and 200 opened in 1998 in Birmingham, England. It is situated next to the main house of the Birmingham Rep, who use it to perform experimental productions and new writing.


External link

  • The Door Official website

Resources

Hockey - Walter Bush

Walter L. Bush, Jr. (born September 25, 1929 in Minneapolis, Minnesota) was an American ice hockey administrator.

In 1955, Walter helped start the Central Hockey League, which turned into one of the few successful minor professional hockey leagues of that era. He was also instrumental in bringing National Hockey League hockey to his home state with the Minnesota North Stars. Walter was inducted into the United States Hockey Hall of Fame in 1980 and later inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2000.


See also

  • List of members of the Hockey Hall of Fame
  • List of members of the United States Hockey Hall of Fame

Resources

Data - MEDR