Gould Transcontinental System
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Gould Transcontinental System
Gould may refer to: People * Gould (name), a surname Places United States * Gould, Arkansas, a city * Gould, Colorado, an unincorporated community * Gould, Ohio, an unincorporated community * Gould, Oklahoma, a town * Gould, West Virginia, an unincorporated community * Gould City, Michigan * Gould City, Washington * Gould Township, Minnesota Multiple countries * Gould Lake (other) * Mount Gould (other) Elsewhere * Gould (crater), a lunar crater formation * Gould Coast, Antarctica * Gould Dome, Alberta, Canada Other uses * Gould baronets, two titles, one in the Baronetage of England and one in the Baronetage of Great Britain * Gould Belt, a partial ring of stars in the Milky Way * Gould designation, a type of star identifier * Gould League, an independent Australian organisation promoting environmental education * Gould Electronics, a company involved in the electronics and semiconductor industries * Gould Racing, a British motorsport company * USC Gould Sc ...
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Gould (name)
Gould is a surname, a variant of "Gold" Acting * Alexander Gould (born 1994), American actor * Dana Gould, American comedian and writer * Desiree Gould (1945–2021), American actress * Elliott Gould (born 1938), American actor * Harold Gould (1923–2010), American actor * James Nutcombe Gould (1849–1899), English stage actor * Jason Gould (born 1966), American actor, writer and director * Julia Gould (1824–1893), English-born stage actress and singer * Kelly Gould, American actress * Mitzi Gould (born 1915), American actress * Nolan Gould, (born 1998), American actor * Peter Gould, American television drama screenwriter * Sandra Gould (1916–1999), American actress and comedian Arts and letters * Alan J. Gould (1898–1993), American newspaper editor * Chester Gould, creator of popular comic book character Dick Tracy * Edd Gould (1988–2012), British animator, creator of Eddsworld * Edward Sherman Gould, 19th-century American author, translator and critic * Elizabeth ...
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Gould Dome
Gould Dome is a dome in Alberta, Canada. Gould Dome has the name of John Gould John Gould (; 14 September 1804 – 3 February 1881) was an English ornithologist. He published a number of monographs on birds, illustrated by plates produced by his wife, Elizabeth Gould, and several other artists, including Edward Lear, ..., an English ornithologist. References Geologic domes Two-thousanders of Alberta Alberta's Rockies {{SouthernAlberta-geo-stub ...
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Goulds (other)
Goulds may refer to: * Goulds, Florida, United States * Goulds, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada See also * Gould (other) * Goulds Pumps Xylem Inc. is a large American water technology provider, in public utility, residential, commercial, agricultural and industrial settings. The company does business in more than 150 countries. Launched in 2011 as the spinoff of the water-relate ... * Goulds Road {{Geodis ...
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Gould Stradivarius
The ''Gould Stradivarius'' of 1693 is a violin made by the Italian luthier Antonio Stradivari of Cremona (1644-1737). This violin is a product of Stradivari's long-pattern and has been modified into a baroque violin configuration by luthier Frederick J. Lindeman located in Amsterdam, Netherlands. It is in a collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in United States, America, New York City.{{Cite web, last=, first=, date=, title="The Gould" Violin, url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/503045, url-status=live, archive-url=, archive-date=, access-date=2020-12-27, website=www.metmuseum.org Ownership The ''Gould'' violin's ownership traces back to 1820 by an owner listed as "Marquis de Villers". Around 1850, a French violinist and celebrated teacher Charles Dancla bought the instrument and in 1880, the violin was then owned by person identified as M. Labitte (Reims, France), possibly having been Louis Labitte, a collector of musical manuscripts. The violin was purcha ...
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Gould Academy
Gould Academy is a private, co-ed, college preparatory boarding and day school founded in 1836 and located in the small town of Bethel, Maine, United States. History In 1835 citizens of Bethel, Maine, formed an organization as trustees of the Bethel High School. A hall was fitted up for a schoolroom, and N. T. True was employed as principal. Encouraged by their success, the trustees reorganized and obtained a charter for an Academy, which by act of the Legislature on January 27, 1836, was incorporated as Bethel Academy. A building was erected, Isaac Randall was the first instructor, and the school opened for its first term on the second Wednesday of September, 1836. Bethel Academy also accepted its first tuition-paying students in 1836, both locals and boarders. Reverend Daniel Gould left his $842 fortune to the school when he died in 1843. Gould stipulated that the school be named for him; from then on it was known as Gould's Academy and eventually Gould Academy. In 1921, pl ...
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USC Gould School Of Law
The USC Gould School of Law, located in Los Angeles, California, is the law school of the University of Southern California. The oldest law school in the Southwestern United States, USC Law traces its beginnings to 1896 and became affiliated with USC in 1900. It was named in honor of Judge James Gould in the mid-1960s. History On March 12, 1890, the ''Los Angeles Times'' declared in an editorial: "It is time that a law school should be established in Los Angeles." During the 1890s, there were several false starts at founding the first law school in Southern California. At its founding in 1891, Throop University (better known today as the California Institute of Technology) announced its intent to include a college of law among its various planned components, but never actually started one. The Southern California College of Law was founded in 1892 and operated until 1894. In the absence of a formal law school, young men interested in careers in law (female lawyers were extreme ...
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Gould Racing
Gould Racing is a British motorsport company, specialising in racing car manufacture and engineering. The company is run by David Gould, and is based in Newbury, Berkshire, England. Although involved in several branches of motorsport, including manufacturing components for Formula One cars, the company's greatest success has come in the manufacture of specialised cars for hillclimbing: every British Hill Climb Championship from 1998 to 2010 was won by a driver in a Gould car. The company also built the one-off Gould Ford Puma for Mike Endean, featuring Xtrac four-wheel-drive, which won the Brighton Speed Trials four times in 2005, 2008, 2009 and 2010. British Hillclimb Championship Gould Racing has enjoyed massive and sustained success in the British Hillclimb Championship having won 19 titles in total, the first of which was when Chris Cramer took the 1985 at the wheel of a Gould/Hart 84/2 and the remaining 18 titles being taken in from 1998 to 2016, 14 of these being taken ...
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Gould Electronics
Gould Electronics Inc. was a manufacturer of electronics and batteries that branched into other fields before being partially absorbed in 1988 by Nippon Mining (now JX Holdings) and closed by them in 2014. History Gould was founded in 1928 and at some point was based in Chandler, Arizona. Some time in the 1950s or beyond it became involved in the semiconductor industry, making printed circuit materials for use by electronics manufacturers. Having acquired Systems Engineering Laboratories Gould became involved in the Superminicomputer computer business. From 1977 to the mid-1980s the company owned the Modicon brand of programmable logic controller, today owned by Schneider Electric. This was in a phase where the company became a mini- conglomerate, with a diverse portfolio of industrial interests. In 1985, Gould, Inc. employed 21,000 worldwide and had sales of 1.4 billion, most of which came from its electrical and electronics products and components, and its defense system ...
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Gould League
The Gould League is an independent Australian organisation promoting Natural environment, environmental education, founded in Victoria, Australia, Victoria in 1909 and named after the English ornithologist John Gould. Largely autonomous branches were subsequently established in other Australian states. History The initial stimulus to form the Gould League was a letter from Jessie McMichael to John Albert Leach, supervisor of nature study in Victorian state schools and later Assistant Chief Inspector of Schools in Victoria. 1900s When formally established in 1909, the Gould League of Bird Lovers, as it was then called, was devoted to bird protection, especially the prevention of bird egg theft, the promotion of interest in and knowledge of birds and to campaign for the formation of animal sanctuary, bird sanctuaries. Members would take a pledge to protect Australian birdlife and not to oology, collect their eggs. One of the main sponsors was the Royal Australasian Ornitholog ...
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Gould Designation
Gould designations for stars are similar to Flamsteed designations in the way that they number stars within a constellation in increasing order of right ascension. Each star is assigned an integer (starting at 1), followed by " G. " (or occasionally followed directly by a "G" without a space), and then the Latin genitive of the constellation it lies in. See 88 modern constellations for a list of constellations and the genitive forms of their names. They were assigned according to the stars' positions in epoch 1875.0, and over time are affected by Precession of the Equinoxes. Due to the star's proper motions or cpm., some stars may now occur out of order. Gould designations first appeared in Uranometria Argentina, a catalogue published in 1879 by Benjamin Apthorp Gould. Many of these designations have fallen out of use, though for many relatively bright southern stars (which are too far south to bear Flamsteed designations), Gould numbers remain the only simple designations availa ...
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Gould Belt
The Gould Belt is a local, partial ring of stars in the Milky Way, about 3,000 light-years long, tilted away from the galactic plane by about 16–20 degrees. It contains many O- and B-type stars, amounting to the nearest star-forming regions of the local spiral arm, to which the Sun belongs. It has recently been largely superseded in definition by the Radcliffe wave and ''Split'' linear structures. The Belt, as formed, and traditionally defined, runs for much less than one tenth of the extent of the local circumference of the galaxy, meaning in galactic coordinates it spans a narrow range of galactic longitudes. The coalescence and/or inception of new stars which cluster within it, nearby, are dated to about 30–50 million years ago. Beyond suspected prior nebulosity of many of the younger stars, and the relative concentration of gas mentioned in the Radcliffe Wave, the factors that have led to the Gould Belt's unbroken nature and concentration are far from fully u ...
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Gould Baronets
There have been two baronetcies created for persons with the surname Gould, one in the Baronetage of England and one in the Baronetage of Great Britain. The Gould Baronetcy, of the City of London, was created in the Baronetage of England on 13 June 1660 for Nicholas Gould, Member of Parliament for Fowey. The title became extinct on his death in 1664. The Gould, later Morgan Baronetcy, of Tredegar in the County of Monmouth, was created in the Baronetage of Great Britain on 15 November 1792. For more information on this creation, see Baron Tredegar. Gould baronets, of the City of London (1660) * Sir Nicholas Gould, 1st Baronet (died 1664) Gould, later Morgan baronets, of Tredegar (1792) *see Baron Tredegar Baron Tredegar, of Tredegar in the County of Monmouth, was a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 16 April 1859 for the Welsh politician Sir Charles Morgan, 3rd Baronet, who had earlier represented Brecon in Parliame ... References * {{DEF ...
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