10Th Mountain Division Name Lookup

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

10Th Mountain Division Name Lookup 10th Mountain Division Name Index The 10th Mountain Division, specializing in mountain and winter warfare, trained at Camp Hale, Colorado, during World War II. In 1987, the National Association of the 10th Mountain Division, consisting of veterans of the World War II division, designated the Denver Public Library Western History Department and the Colorado Historical Society as joint repositories of their historical materials. World War II 10th Mountain Division Database: In 1998 a small group of volunteers set out to establish a database of information about every man who served with the WWII 10th Mountain Division. They searched the National Archives in St. Louis and the 10th Mountain Division Resource Center in Denver. The result is a database of 32,213 records of men who served with the “Mountain Troops” from 1941-1945. While this database is not available online, you may use the Name Lookup Index to determine if a person was a member of the 10th Mountain Division, and the company or Regiment with which he served. Members of the 10th Mountain Division First Name Last Name Suffix Company Regiment or Battalion PETER AADLAND D 99TH INF OLAF H AANONSEN C 99TH INF SVERRE AANONSEN D 99TH INF ANDREW L AARHUS HQ 86TH INF CECIL C AARON VET 10TH MED JOHN A AARON E 86TH INF JACOB A AAROS 110TH SIGNAL CO OLAF M AARSETH D 99TH INF ADOLPH J AARSTAD C 99TH INF MERVIN A AAS HQ 99TH INF THEODOR AAS B 99TH INF MARVIN J AASBOE L 85TH INF BENNIE T AASEN C 602ND FA HIRAM J ABARE G 87TH INF MANUEL G ABASTA JR A 87TH INF VINCENT P ABATE HQ 1ST 86TH INF MEADE A ABBEY B 85TH INF ALBERT L ABBOTT A 90TH INF DAVID ABBOTT E 86TH INF FRANK D ABBOTT C 601ST FA GARLAND E ABBOTT A 85TH INF HAROLD W ABBOTT D 86TH INF HARVARD H ABBOTT A 86TH INF JAMES S ABBOTT H 86TH INF JOSEPH L ABBOTT A 605TH FA STUART E ABBOTT L 86TH INF WILLIAM A ABBOTT B 86TH INF WILLIAM F ABBOTT L 87TH INF FRANK ABDON D 85TH INF JAMES R ABEL D 10TH QM HARRY C ABELES B 90TH INF OLE S ABELSETH E 87TH INF ALBERT ABERCROMBIE B 87TH INF LEHMAN H ABERNATHY C 86TH INF THOMAS B ABERNATHY JR HQ 616TH FA LEE E ABLES D 126TH ENGR ISADORE ABLEZAR C 126TH ENGR ARTHUR JOHN ABNEY C 10TH QM CLIFFORD G ABNEY JR A 87TH INF ALBERT M ABOOD C 126TH ENGR ARNOLD C ABRAHAMSEN 110TH SIGNAL CO HAROLD E ABRAHAMSEN D 99TH INF 1 Members of the 10th Mountain Division First Name Last Name Suffix Company Regiment or Battalion RAGNER ABRAHAMSEN D 99TH INF ARNE A ABRAHAMSON A 605TH FA FRANK ABRAHAMSON 229TH ENGR GUSTAVE ABRAHAMSON B 99TH INF RICHARD C ABRAHAMSON K 86TH INF EUGENE ABRAITIS C 616TH FA PAUL ABRAMCZYK L 85TH INF GEORGE E ABRAMS HQ 10TH ANTI TANK AARON ABRAMSON K 85TH INF ARTHUR ABRUZZO A 87TH INF WILLIS C ABSHIRE B 10TH MED ZACK ABSHIRE L 85TH INF EUGENE S ABY A 616TH FA CARL ACCARDO L 85TH INF VITO J ACCIARITO I 87TH INF JOSE M ACEBO L 87TH INF GENNARO G ACETO A 616TH FA TERRENCE F ACHATZ A 126TH ENGR HERBERT R ACHENBACH L 85TH INF MIKE ACHILLAS F 86TH INF LESLIE C ACHILLES K 86TH INF AVON C ACKER A 87TH INF HAROLD I ACKER VET 10TH MED KARL ACKER B 87TH INF WALTER J ACKERLY JR E 86TH INF GEORGE ACKERMAN JR C 86TH INF GEORGE C ACKERMAN HQ 86TH INF LESTER R ACKERMAN D 10TH MED ROBERT E ACKERSON HQ 86TH INF MELVIN G ACKLAND C 99TH INF GEORGE ACKLEY B 90TH INF LAWRENCE L ACKLEY MTN TR GROUP EDWARD I ACOSTA SVC 85TH INF RALPH J ACOSTA A 85TH INF CLINTON W ACREY L 87TH INF HOWARD G ADAIR A 90TH INF GEORGE L ADAM SVC 87TH INF GORDON S ADAM HQ 87TH INF FILBERTO ADAMA G 85TH INF WALTER J ADAMCZYK 1125TH ARFA JOHN S ADAMOWSKI 10TH CAVALRY ALBERT E ADAMS I 85TH INF 2 Members of the 10th Mountain Division First Name Last Name Suffix Company Regiment or Battalion ARTHUR C ADAMS HQ 1ST 87TH INF BRUCE S ADAMS I 86TH INF CARL F ADAMS K 85TH INF CLARENCE E ADAMS K 87TH INF CLYDE B ADAMS MTN TR GROUP CLYDE W ADAMS A 87TH INF CURTIS M ADAMS A 604TH FA DAVID E ADAMS JR A 86TH INF DELL M ADAMS L 86TH INF DONALD R ADAMS I 85TH INF EDWARD ADAMS JR B 602ND FA EDWARD E ADAMS K 85TH INF GEORGE W ADAMS B 616TH FA GERALD M ADAMS D 85TH INF HAROLD E ADAMS G 86TH INF HARRY W ADAMS SVC 87TH INF HARWELL L ADAMS HQ 86TH INF J B ADAMS B 86TH INF JAMES A ADAMS HQ 616TH FA JAMES B ADAMS B 605TH FA JAMES H ADAMS MED 616TH FA JAMES L ADAMS B 605TH FA JAMES S ADAMS B 602ND FA JEDIDIAH H ADAMS K 86TH INF JOE ADAMS M 87TH INF JOHN ADAMS F 85TH INF JOHNNIE ADAMS K 85TH INF LAURENCE B ADAMS MED 87TH INF LAWRENCE ADAMS 10TH RECON LAWRIE L ADAMS JR B 90TH INF LEE M ADAMS JR I 85TH INF LEONARD D ADAMS HQ 604TH FA MURLAND C ADAMS L 85TH INF NICHOLAS ADAMS C 85TH INF NOLAS T ADAMS B 126TH ENGR RALPH W ADAMS A 10TH QM ROBERT W ADAMS A 85TH INF ROLAND ADAMS 10TH RECON ROY J ADAMS HQ 10TH MED SILAS B ADAMS 710TH ORD CO VESTER H ADAMS C 87TH INF WILLIAM F ADAMS A 90TH INF 3 Members of the 10th Mountain Division First Name Last Name Suffix Company Regiment or Battalion JOSEPH ADAMSKI A 10TH QM WILLIAM M ADCOOK HQ 1ST 86TH INF PASQUALE F ADDANTE 10TH CAVALRY VINCENT ADDEO F 87TH INF FOREST K ADDINGTON HQ 1ST 86TH INF RALPH E ADDIS C 86TH INF WILLIAM B ADDY A 87TH INF WILLIAM J ADELMAN HQ 87TH INF SAMUEL A ADELO HQ 90TH INF THOMAS ADELSTEIN HQ 2ND 86TH INF RODNEY V ADER C 86TH INF TEDDY T ADER C 126TH ENGR ARTHUR ADKINS B 87TH INF BEN ADKINS JR K 86TH INF BERNIE ADKINS A 605TH FA CECIL G ADKINS K 85TH INF CHARLES W ADKINS K 87TH INF HOBERT ADKINS C 86TH INF RAY L ADKINS H 86TH INF ROBERT B ADKINS M 85TH INF SAM C ADKINS D 126TH ENGR WOODROW W ADKINS I 87TH INF JAMES O ADKISSON D 87TH INF EDWARD E ADLER A 602ND FA JOHN C ADLER A 85TH INF MAX M ADLER C 85TH INF RAYMOND ADLER L 85TH INF THOMAS P AERY I 87TH INF ADRIAN R AESCHLIMAN C 126TH ENGR WILLIAM G AGA HQ 10TH QM HAIG T AGAMIAN B 86TH INF ALBERT E AGAR HQ 10TH DIV ART PAUL C AGNEW A 85TH INF JOSEPH H AGNOLI F 87TH INF JOSEPH P AGRESTI L 85TH INF JOSE A AGUILAR 110TH SIGNAL CO LUIS L AGUILAR HQ 3RD 87TH INF LUTERIO AGUILAR H 87TH INF HERMINIO AGUIRRE H 87TH INF PHILIP AGUNZO F 86TH INF CLIFFORD J AHEARN 616TH FA ELTON AHLNESS C 86TH INF 4 Members of the 10th Mountain Division First Name Last Name Suffix Company Regiment or Battalion WILLIAM J AHLRICHS F 86TH INF LEO J AHONEN L 85TH INF RICHARD B AHRENS HQ 605TH FA RODMAN C AHRENS C 85TH INF ARNOLD C AHSMUHS F 87TH INF HAROLD W AIKEN C 85TH INF CLAIR L AIKINS MED 87TH INF WILLIE E AILSTOCK JR A 87TH INF JOHN R AINGWORTH 710TH ORD CO WILLIAM B AINSLEY K 87TH INF CLIFFORD R AINSWORTH A 87TH INF EARL H AINSWORTH 110TH SIGNAL CO HENRY E AINSWORTH D 10TH MED JESSIE W AINSWORTH G 87TH INF OZELL A AINSWORTH K 85TH INF MARIO AIOSA C 602ND FA WILLIAM W AIRHEART HQ 1ST 87TH INF WILLIAM D AISENBERG MTN TR CENTER JOSEPH AITA JR G 85TH INF GILBERT AITKEN C 10TH QM ARNE AJER A 99TH INF BURL D AKANS E 85TH INF WALTER C AKERBERG G 85TH INF LEONARD J AKERLEY C 10TH MED EDWARD C AKERLY C 126TH ENGR EVAN B AKERS C 605TH FA ROBERT L AKERS M 87TH INF WALLACE M AKERS 10TH CAVALRY CARL B AKESON A 604TH FA JAY M AKIN HQ 3RD 86TH INF EUEL AKINS D 87TH INF LAVEARN AKINS A 90TH INF JOHN E AKRIDGE SR M 87TH INF SIGURD AKSELSEN C 99TH INF DOMINIC ALANO C 85TH INF ANGELO ALBERGO B 85TH INF IRVIN R ALBERS H 85TH INF JOHN T ALBERT B 85TH INF PAUL D ALBERTELLI I 87TH INF ALBERTI A 90TH INF ANTHONY ALBERTINE HQ 2ND 85TH INF HAROLD A ALBITZ B 126TH ENGR 5 Members of the 10th Mountain Division First Name Last Name Suffix Company Regiment or Battalion JOSEPH G ALBRIGHT B 10TH MED WAYNE H ALBRIGHT JR A 604TH FA WILLIAM C ALBRIGHT A 87TH INF BIRGE L ALBRITON JR I 87TH INF EARNEST B ALBRITTAIN SVC 86TH INF DEWEY C ALBRITTON B 605TH FA HENRY O ALBRO K 87TH INF GEORGE A ALBUE B 86TH INF AL ALCARAZ B 86TH INF LOUIS A ALCOCK B 126TH ENGR WALTER J ALCOKE MED 86TH INF WALTER L ALCORN B 10TH MED JAMES A ALDAHL A 87TH INF CECILIO ALDAZ A 86TH INF JAY H ALDERS MED 86TH INF JAMES M ALDERSON A 86TH INF GRAYDON B ALDRED E 90TH INF HERBERT R ALDRICH HQ 1ST 86TH INF RALPH C ALDRICH A 90TH INF RICHARD C ALDRICH E 87TH INF ROGER L ALDRICH B 86TH INF WILLIAM G ALDRICH MED 86TH INF LEO A ALEKSA 110TH SIGNAL CO MAURO R ALEMAN B 87TH INF STRATFORD G ALEX K 86TH INF ALBERT C ALEXANDER JR G 86TH INF ARNOLD W ALEXANDER K 87TH INF DEAN S ALEXANDER HQ 126TH ENGR EDGAR A ALEXANDER D 85TH INF EUGENE R ALEXANDER C 605TH FA FLOYD E ALEXANDER F 87TH INF HOWARD T ALEXANDER K 87TH INF PATSY J ALEXANDER B 616TH FA PERRY R ALEXANDER HQ 10TH DIV ART RICHARD H ALEXANDER HQ 1ST 86TH INF ROBERT A ALEXANDER HQ 1ST 85TH INF SELWYN T ALEXANDER A 10TH ANTI TANK WILLIAM P ALEXANDER 10TH RECON ADAM ALEXANDROWITZ G 85TH INF JAMES K ALEXATOS K 85TH INF WALTER ALEXCZUK H 86TH INF HOMER A ALEXSON I 87TH INF 6 Members of the 10th Mountain Division First Name Last Name Suffix Company Regiment or Battalion ELLIS B ALFEREZ A 90TH INF ANTHONY ALFERO L 85TH INF HAROLD J ALFORD HQ 10TH DIV LEONARD ALFORD C 10TH MED PHILIP ALFORD JR A 604TH FA THOMAS A ALFORD 710TH ORD CO ISAAC N ALHADEFF L 87TH INF LESLIE W ALKE HQ 87TH INF FERDINAND F ALKO MED 87TH INF DONALD B ALLAN HQ 601ST FA DONALD ALLARD 710TH ORD CO PHIL E ALLARD HQ 87TH INF FRED G ALLBRIGHT C 85TH INF CLARENCE ALLEMAN E 85TH INF ALVIE L ALLEN D 126TH ENGR ARTHUR ALLEN H 87TH INF ARTHUR G ALLEN MED 87TH INF ARVEL J ALLEN C 604TH FA BERT ALLEN I 85TH INF BURTON R ALLEN HQ 90TH INF CHARLES B ALLEN E 85TH INF CLARENCE H ALLEN B 126TH ENGR DAN ALLEN A 616TH FA DAVID B ALLEN JR M 86TH INF DAVID J ALLEN F 90TH INF DAVIS B ALLEN G 86TH INF DONALD C ALLEN HQ 86TH INF DOUGLAS J ALLEN HQ 10TH QM EARL D ALLEN JR B 87TH INF EDDIE R ALLEN B 602ND FA EDGAR F ALLEN MED 87TH INF ELDRIDGE L ALLEN B 86TH INF ESTILL ALLEN C 604TH FA FLOYD D ALLEN JR HQ 10TH DIV FLOYD L ALLEN F 87TH INF GEORGE H ALLEN B
Recommended publications
  • Alma's Good Trip Mikko Joensuu in Holy Water Hippie Queen of Design Frank Ocean of Love Secret Ingredients T H Is Is T H E M
    FLOW MAGAZINE THIS IS THE MAGAZINE OF FLOW FESTIVAL. FESTIVAL. FLOW OF IS THE MAGAZINE THIS ALMA'S GOOD TRIP MIKKO JOENSUU IN HOLY WATER HIPPIE QUEEN OF DESIGN FRANK OCEAN OF LOVE SECRET INGREDIENTS F entrance L 7 OW F L O W the new This is 1 to 0 2 2 0 1 7 4 TABLE OF CONTENTS 6–9 12–13 18–21 36–37 Editor 7 7 W Tero Kartastenpää POOL OF ALMA Alma: ”We never really traveled when we were Art Director little. Our parents are both on disability Double Happiness pension and we didn’t IN SHORT have loads of money. Swimming with a Whenever our classmates Designers singer-songwriter. traveled to Thailand Featuring Mikko MINT MYSTERY SOLVED or Tenerife for winter Viivi Prokofjev SHH Joensuu. holidays we took a cruise AIGHT, LOOK to Tallinn. When me and Antti Grundstén 22–27 Anna turned eighteen we Frank Ocean sings about Robynne Redgrave traveled to London with love and God and God and our friends. We stayed for love. Here's what you didn’t five days, drunk.” 40–41 Subeditor know about alt-country star Ryan Adams. Aurora Rämö Alma went to L.A. and 14–15 met everybody. Publisher 34–37 O The design hippie Laura Flow Festival Ltd. 1 1 Väinölä creates a flower ALWAYS altar for yoga people. Lana Del Rey’s American Contributors nightmares, plant cutting 30–33 Hanna Anonen craze, the smallest talk etc. The most quiet places OCEAN OF TWO LOVES Maija Astikainen from abandoned villas to Pauliina Holma Balloon stage finds new UNKNOWN forgotten museums.
    [Show full text]
  • Seleção Externa 2012 003 Classificados-1
    BANCO DO BRASIL PÁG. 001 SELEÇÃO EXTERNA 2012/003 CARGO ESCRITURÁRIO DATA DE EMISSÃO: 08/04/2013 APROVADOS EM ORDEM DE CLASSIFICAÇÃO POR MICRORREGIÃO - RESULTADO FINAL (APÓS ANÁLISE DE RECURSOS) MACRORREGIÃO:01 MICRORREGIÃO:01 NÚMERO NOME DOCUMENTO NOTA CLASS 000906e DANIELLY DOS SANTOS AMORIM CAMINHA 0000000010652728 49.00 1 003566k RONALDO DOS SANTOS ROCHA 0000000000646885 49.00 2 002167c JOSE KENNEDY LUCAS DOS SANTOS FREITAS 0000000010486240 48.00 3 000685d CAROLINA BRAGA GONCALVES DE OLIVEIRA 0000000001748476 48.00 4 000055d ADRIANO JOSE CALDAS DE AGUIAR CAMPELLO 0000000003069005 48.00 5 000843g CYNTIA ALVES COSTA 000000MG11518421 48.00 6 002363c KEYZE PRITIH DA COSTA CAMPOS GOMES 0000000010131140 48.00 7 001784k IRACY MONT ALVERNE XAVIER DE OLIVEIRA 0000000010216707 47.00 8 000219h AMANDA CARVALHO CSTA 0002002002358694 46.00 9 000741j CILENE DOMINGOS DA SILVA 0000000000301008 46.00 10 002577k LUCIANA MONTEIRO QUEIROZ DA SILVA 0000000010038272 46.00 11 001463b FRANCISCA ISIS ARAUJO MIGUEL 0000000010974679 46.00 12 000745g CINTHIA SILVA DE ARAUJO 0000000010914579 46.00 13 001262c ERICK REIMAR SOARES SOUZA 0000000010267344 46.00 14 001768b IGOR CHAVES DE MEDEIROS 0000000000433551 45.00 15 000774c CLEBERTON SAMPAIO RIBEIRO 0000000010911740 45.00 16 002177f JOSE MARIO HERMANN 0000000016272480 45.00 17 001652e GLEICIANE DE MELO LIMA SILVA 0000000000394752 45.00 18 001094h EDUARDO DOS SANTOS MORAIS NETO 0000000000258675 45.00 19 003113g NARLEY DE SOUZA MELO 0000000010183531 45.00 20 003178b NICHOLAS DA SILVA SANTOS 0000000000354959 45.00
    [Show full text]
  • DOMESTIC RATS, FLEAS and NATIVE RODENTS
    DOMESTIC RATS, FLEAS and NATIVE RODENTS In Relation To Plague In The United States By Entomologist Carl 0. Mohr INTRODUCTION and finally to the lungs causing pneumonic plague. ubonic plague is a rodent and rodent - Pneumonic plague is extremely fatal and flea disease caused by the plague bacil­ highly infectious when sputum droplets pass Blus Pasturella pest is which is transmitted direct from person to person. The death from animal to animal and thence to man by rate due to it is practically 100 percent. fleas. It is highly fatal. At least half Plague is dreaded particularly where of the human cases result in death without living conditions are such as to bring modern medication. (Table I — last two human beings into close contact with large columns). Because of their close associa* oriental-rat-flea populations, and where tion with man, domestic rats* and their crowded conditions permit rapid pneumonic fleas, especially the oriental rat flea transmission from man to man. Xenopsylla cheopis, are responsible for most human epidemics. Only occasional cases ANCIENT AMERICAN DISEASE OR RECENT are caused by bites of other fleas or by INTRODUCTION direct infection from handling rodents. Infection due to bites of fleas or due to Two widely different views exist con­ direct contact commonly results in swollen cerning the arrival of plague in North lymph glands, called buboes, hence the name America. The prevalent view is that it was bubonic plague. Infection may progress to introduced from the Orient into North the blood stream causing septicemic plague, America at San Francisco through ship- * Rattus rattus and Rattus norvegicus.
    [Show full text]
  • The United States Atomic Army, 1956-1960 Dissertation
    INTIMIDATING THE WORLD: THE UNITED STATES ATOMIC ARMY, 1956-1960 DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Paul C. Jussel, B.A., M.M.A.S., M.S.S. * * * * * The Ohio State University 2004 Dissertation Committee Approved by Professor Allan R. Millett, Advisor Professor John R. Guilmartin __________________ Professor William R. Childs Advisor Department of History ABSTRACT The atomic bomb created a new military dynamic for the world in 1945. The bomb, if used properly, could replace the artillery fires and air-delivered bombs used to defeat the concentrated force of an enemy. The weapon provided the U.S. with an unparalleled advantage over the rest of the world, until the Soviet Union developed its own bomb by 1949 and symmetry in warfare returned. Soon, theories of warfare changed to reflect the belief that the best way to avoid the effects of the bomb was through dispersion of forces. Eventually, the American Army reorganized its divisions from the traditional three-unit organization to a new five-unit organization, dubbed pentomic by its Chief of Staff, General Maxwell D. Taylor. While atomic weapons certainly had an effect on Taylor’s reasoning to adopt the pentomic organization, the idea was not new in 1956; the Army hierarchy had been wrestling with restructuring since the end of World War II. Though the Korean War derailed the Army’s plans for the early fifties, it returned to the forefront under the Eisenhower Administration. The driving force behind reorganization in 1952 was not ii only the reoriented and reduced defense budget, but also the Army’s inroads to the atomic club, formerly the domain of only the Air Force and the Navy.
    [Show full text]
  • 2Nd INFANTRY REGIMENT
    2nd INFANTRY REGIMENT 1110 pages (approximate) Boxes 1243-1244 The 2nd Infantry Regiment was a component part of the 5th Infantry Division. This Division was activated in 1939 but did not enter combat until it landed on Utah Beach, Normandy, three days after D-Day. For the remainder of the war in Europe the Division participated in numerous operations and engagements of the Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, Ardennes-Alsace and Central Europe campaigns. The records of the 2nd Infantry Regiment consist mostly of after action reports and journals which provide detailed accounts of the operations of the Regiment from July 1944 to May 1945. The records also contain correspondence on the early history of the Regiment prior to World War II and to its training activities in the United States prior to entering combat. Of particular importance is a file on the work of the Regiment while serving on occupation duty in Iceland in 1942. CONTAINER LIST Box No. Folder Title 1243 2nd Infantry Regiment Unit Histories January 1943-June 1944 2nd Infantry Regiment Unit Histories, July-October 1944 2nd Infantry Regiment Histories, July 1944- December 1945 2nd Infantry Regiment After Action Reports, July-September 1944 2nd Infantry Regiment After Action Reports, October-December 1944 2nd Infantry Regiment After Action Reports, January-May 1945 2nd Infantry Regiment Casualty List, 1944-1945 2nd Infantry Regiment Unit Journal, 1945 2nd Infantry Regiment Narrative History, October 1944-May 1945 2nd Infantry Regiment History Correspondence, 1934-1936 2nd Infantry
    [Show full text]
  • USASF Cheer Age Grid
    2020-2021 USASF Cheer Age Grid All adjustments in RED indicate a change/addition since the previous season (2019-2020) All adjustments in BLUE indicate a change/addition since the early release in February 2020 We do not anticipate changes but reserve the right to make changes if needed. We will continue to monitor the fluidity of COVID-19 and reassess if need be to help our members. The USASF Cheer and Dance Rules, Glossary, associated Age Grids and Cheer Rules Overview (collectively the “USASF Rules Documents”) are copyright- protected and may not be disseminated to non-USASF members without prior written permission from USASF. Members may print a copy of the USASF Rules Documents for personal use while coaching a team, choreographing or engaging in event production, but may not distribute, post or give a third party permission to post on any website, or otherwise share the USASF Rules Documents. 1 Copyright © 2020 U.S. All Star Federation Released 1.11.21 -Effective 2020-2021 Season 2020-2021 Cheer Age Grid This document contains the division offerings for the 2020-2021 season in the following tiers: • All Star Elite • All Star Elite International • All Star Prep • All Star Novice • All Star FUNdamentals • All Star CheerABILITIES Exceptional Athletes (formerly Special Needs) The age grid provides a "menu" of divisions that may be offered by an individual event producer. An event producer does not have to offer every division listed. However, a USASF member event producer must only offer divisions from the age grids herein and/or combine/split divisions based upon the guidelines herein, unless prior written approval is received from the USASF.
    [Show full text]
  • The Aeronautical Division, US Signal Corps By
    The First Air Force: The Aeronautical Division, U.S. Signal Corps By: Hannah Chan, FAA history intern The United States first used aviation warfare during the Civil War with the Union Army Balloon Corps (see Civil War Ballooning: The First U.S. War Fought on Land, at Sea, and in the Air). The lighter-than-air balloons helped to gather intelligence and accurately aim artillery. The Army dissolved the Balloon Corps in 1863, but it established a balloon section within the U.S. Signal Corps, the Army’s communication branch, during the Spanish-American War in 1892. This section contained only one balloon, but it successfully made several flights and even went to Cuba. However, the Army dissolved the section after the war in 1898, allowing the possibility of military aeronautics advancement to fade into the background. The Wright brothers' successful 1903 flight at Kitty Hawk was a catalyst for aviation innovation. Aviation pioneers, such as the Wright Brothers and Glenn Curtiss, began to build heavier-than-air aircraft. Aviation accomplishments with the dirigible and planes, as well as communication innovations, caused U.S. Army Brigadier General James Allen, Chief Signal Officer of the Army, to create an Aeronautical Division on August 1, 1907. The A Signal Corps Balloon at the Aeronautics Division division was to “have charge of all matters Balloon Shed at Fort Myer, VA Photo: San Diego Air and Space Museum pertaining to military ballooning, air machines, and all kindred subjects.” At its creation, the division consisted of three people: Captain (Capt.) Charles deForest Chandler, head of the division, Corporal (Cpl.) Edward Ward, and First-class Private (Pfc.) Joseph E.
    [Show full text]
  • Men's Soccer Page 1/1 Combined Statistics As of Apr 12, 2021 All Games
    MEN’S SOCCER 2020-21 GAME NOTES » 2001 & 2011 NCAA Champions » Eight NCAA College Cups ‘20-’21 SCHEDULE/RESULTS THE MATCHUP 7-4-3 overall, 7-2-3 ACC North Carolina (7-4-3) 4-3-1 home, 3-1-2 away Head Coach: Carlos Somoano (Eckerd College, ‘92) Career Record: 135-41-29 (10th season) Fall Record at North Carolina: same Oct. 2 at Duke* (ACCNX) W, 2-0 United Soccer Coaches Rank: No. 16 Oct. 9 Clemson* (ESPNU) W, 1-0 Oct. 18 at Wake Forest* (ACCNX) L, 0-1 ot Charlotte (6-3-1) Oct. 27 at Clemson* (ACCN) T, 3-3 2ot Head Coach: Kevin Langan Nov. 1 NC State* (ACCNX) T, 0-0 2ot United Soccer Coaches Rank: No. 14 Nov. 6 Duke* (ACCN) W, 2-0 2020 ACC Tournament (Chapel Hill) Nov. 15 Clemson (ACCN) L, 0-1 ot THE KICKOFF TAR HEEL RUNDOWN Spring Feb. 25 Liberty (ACCNX) L, 0-1 Matchup: North Carolina (7-4-3) vs. Home 4-3-1 March 5 #4 Pitt* (ACCNX) W, 3-0 Charlotte (6-3-1) Away 3-1-2 March 13 #24 Virginia* (ACCNX) W, 2-0 Rankings: UNC No. 16, Charlotte No. 14 Neutral 0-0-0 March 20 at Syracuse* (ACCNX) T, 0-0 2ot (United Soccer Coaches) vs. United Soccer Coaches ranked foes 3-1-1 March 27 at Notre Dame* (ACCNX) W, 2-1 ot vs. Unranked opponents 4-3-2 Date: Sunday May 2, 2021 April 2 Virginia Tech* (ACCNX) L, 0-1 vs. ACC teams (incl. ACC Tournament) 7-3-3 April 9 at Duke* (ACCNX) W, 1-0 Site: Cary, N.C.
    [Show full text]
  • Transnational Finnish Mobilities: Proceedings of Finnforum XI
    Johanna Leinonen and Auvo Kostiainen (Eds.) Johanna Leinonen and Auvo Kostiainen This volume is based on a selection of papers presented at Johanna Leinonen and Auvo Kostiainen (Eds.) the conference FinnForum XI: Transnational Finnish Mobili- ties, held in Turku, Finland, in 2016. The twelve chapters dis- cuss two key issues of our time, mobility and transnational- ism, from the perspective of Finnish migration. The volume is divided into four sections. Part I, Mobile Pasts, Finland and Beyond, brings forth how Finland’s past – often imagined TRANSNATIONAL as more sedentary than today’s mobile world – was molded by various short and long-distance mobilities that occurred FINNISH MOBILITIES: both voluntarily and involuntarily. In Part II, Transnational Influences across the Atlantic, the focus is on sociocultural PROCEEDINGS OF transnationalism of Finnish migrants in the early 20th cen- tury United States. Taken together, Parts I and II show how FINNFORUM XI mobility and transnationalism are not unique features of our FINNISH MOBILITIES TRANSNATIONAL time, as scholars tend to portray them. Even before modern communication technologies and modes of transportation, migrants moved back and forth and nurtured transnational ties in various ways. Part III, Making of Contemporary Finn- ish America, examines how Finnishness is understood and maintained in North America today, focusing on the con- cepts of symbolic ethnicity and virtual villages. Part IV, Con- temporary Finnish Mobilities, centers on Finns’ present-day emigration patterns, repatriation experiences, and citizen- ship practices, illustrating how, globally speaking, Finns are privileged in their ability to be mobile and exercise transna- tionalism. Not only is the ability to move spread very uneven- ly, so is the capability to upkeep transnational connections, be they sociocultural, economic, political, or purely symbol- ic.
    [Show full text]
  • Notices of the American Mathematical Society
    OF THE 1994 AMS Election Special Section page 7 4 7 Fields Medals and Nevanlinna Prize Awarded at ICM-94 page 763 SEPTEMBER 1994, VOLUME 41, NUMBER 7 Providence, Rhode Island, USA ISSN 0002-9920 Calendar of AMS Meetings and Conferences This calendar lists all meetings and conferences approved prior to the date this issue insofar as is possible. Instructions for submission of abstracts can be found in the went to press. The summer and annual meetings are joint meetings with the Mathe· January 1994 issue of the Notices on page 43. Abstracts of papers to be presented at matical Association of America. the meeting must be received at the headquarters of the Society in Providence, Rhode Abstracts of papers presented at a meeting of the Society are published in the Island, on or before the deadline given below for the meeting. Note that the deadline for journal Abstracts of papers presented to the American Mathematical Society in the abstracts for consideration for presentation at special sessions is usually three weeks issue corresponding to that of the Notices which contains the program of the meeting, earlier than that specified below. Meetings Abstract Program Meeting# Date Place Deadline Issue 895 t October 28-29, 1994 Stillwater, Oklahoma Expired October 896 t November 11-13, 1994 Richmond, Virginia Expired October 897 * January 4-7, 1995 (101st Annual Meeting) San Francisco, California October 3 January 898 * March 4-5, 1995 Hartford, Connecticut December 1 March 899 * March 17-18, 1995 Orlando, Florida December 1 March 900 * March 24-25,
    [Show full text]
  • International Marian Association Letter to Cardinal Mueller
    International Marian Association Letter to Cardinal Mueller 31 May 2017 Eminence, Gerhard Cardinal Müller Prefect, Congregation for the Doctrine on Faith Piazza del S. Uffizio, 11 00193 Roma, Italy Your Eminence: We, Executive Members of the International Marian Association, which consti- tutes over 100 theologians, cardinals, bishops, clergy, religious and lay leaders from 5 continents, wish to, first of all, thank you for the many excellent and courageous articulations and defenses of our holy Catholic Faith, as contained in your recently released, The Cardinal Müller Report. At the same time, we are obliged to express to you our grave concern regarding your comment from the text when you state: “(for example, the Church … does not call her [Mary] “co-redeemer,” because the only Redeemer is Christ, and she herself has been redeemed sublimiore modo, as Lumen Gentium [n. 53] says, and serves this redemption wrought exclusively by Christ… (p. 133). You unfortunately refer to this term as an example of false exaggeration: “falsely exaggerating per excessum, attributing to the Virgin what is not attributable to her” (Ibid.). Your Eminence, in making this statement, albeit as a private theologian since a public interview carries no authoritative or magisterial status, you have publicly stated: 1) a theologically and historically erroneous position, since the Church undeni- ably has and does call Mary a co-redeemer; and 2) a position which, in itself, materially dissents from the repeated and authoritative teachings of the Papal Magisterium, the historical teachings from your own Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith (Holy Office)and other Vatican Congregations; the pre- and post-conciliar teachings of the Magisterium as expressed through numerous cardinals, bishops and national episcopal conferences; teachings of the broader Church, inclusive of multiple can- onized saints and blessed who all do, in fact, assent to and theologically expand upon the authentic Magisterial teachings of the Church concerning Mary as a co- redeemer.
    [Show full text]
  • UEL Booking List Beforeqf First
    UEFA Europa League 2010/2011 Booking List before Quarter-finals, 1st leg PC Group stage R32 R16 QF SF F No Player 123456121212121 FC Porto 7 Belluschi Fernando Daniel Y 6 Guarin Vasquez Fredy Alejandro Y 8 Iria Santos Moutinho João Filipe Y 30 Otamendi Nicolás Y 13 Perdomo Jorge Ciro Fucile Y 5 Pereira Barragan Alvaro Daniel R 4 Pereira Roque Maicon R 25 Reges Fernando Francisco R 19 Rodriguez James Y 10 Rodriguez Barotti Cristian YR 21 Sapunaru Cristian Ionut Y FC Spartak Moskva 35 De Sousa Pereira Rafael Y 81 Dykan Andrii Y 99 Kombarov Dmitry Y 77 Kombarov Kirill Y 64 McGeady Aiden Y 12 Meschini Alex Raphael Y Y* 22 Rojo Faustino Marcos Alberto YY* 5 Shyeshukov Alexander Y 7 Silva Ibson Barreto R/Y 11 Soares Morais Welliton R Y 17 Suchý Marek Y YY S Team staff All Yellow Cards from other competitions PC since last initialization Y Booked R Dismissed Y+R Ordinary Yellow Card and Direct Red Card * Misses next match if booked ** Subject to appeal ### Suspended for at least one match Suspended OOC Out of Competition This list is destined for the press. It is given to the competing teams for information purposes only and therefore has no legal value. In the event of any discrepancy, only the correspondence addressed directly to the teams will be considered as the authoritative version. UEFA Europa League 2010/2011 Booking List before Quarter-finals, 1st leg PC Group stage R32 R16 QF SF F No Player 123456121212121 SL Benfica 10 Aimar Pablo César Y Y* 8 Antonio Salvio Eduardo Y Y* 4 Da Silva Anderson Luis Y 20 Gaitán Nicolás R/Y 6 García Fernández
    [Show full text]