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first and successful
Besides its historical significance as a break with the centuries-old tradition of British insularity, Britain's move, if successful, will constitute an historic landmark of the first importance in the movement toward the unification of Europe and the Western world.
Ever since he had first begun to study music and to teach it, Rousseau had dreamed of piercing through to fame as the result of a successful opera.
That first entry there is the Vermont Flumenophobe, the earliest and one of the most successful of my eighty-three varieties -- great big scapulars and hardly any primaries at all.
This voyage was the first successful crossing of the Atlantic under steam propulsion.
Despite the successful rehabilitation of over a half million disabled persons in the first eleven years after 1943, the existing program was still seen to be inadequate to cope with the nation's backlog of an estimated two million disabled.
The first is a wide-ranging sample of successful tonal analyses.
Moritz was bothered during the first two games this year by a pulled muscle in the thigh of his right ( kicking ) leg and, as a result, several of his successful conversions have gone barely far enough.
It was probably man's first successful flight in a missile.
* In 1865 Brunel's ship the SS Great Eastern laid the first successful transatlantic telegraph cable.
Alumni was the most successful team in the amateur era of Argentine football, winning 10 of the 14 league championships contested, being considered the first great football team.
* 1859 – Petroleum is discovered in Titusville, Pennsylvania leading to the world's first commercially successful oil well.
Racing began soon after the construction of the first successful gasoline-fueled automobiles.
* 1956 –, the world's first successful container ship, leaves Port Newark, New Jersey for Houston, Texas.
While Parsons pursued his own solo career and took many members of the Project on the road for the first time in a successful worldwide tour, Woolfson went on to produce musical plays influenced by the Project's music.
The fourth encounter is with Micaiah, the prophet who, when asked for advice on a military campaign, first assures Ahab he will be successful and ultimately gives Ahab a glimpse into God's plan for Ahab to die in battle ( 1 Kings 22 ).
* 1960 – Echo 1A, NASA's first successful communications satellite, is launched.
* 1888 – The first successful adding machine in the United States is patented by William Seward Burroughs.
After finishing his education, Albuquerque first served in North Africa and in the Mediterranean where he took part in numerous successful campaigns against the Arabs and the Ottomans.
* 1962 – Japan conducts a test of the NAMC YS-11, its first aircraft since World War II and its only successful commercial aircraft from before or after the war.
Following the formation of baseball's first professional organization, the National Association of Professional Baseball Players, which became known as the National Association, the Association, or NA, in 1871, Spalding joined the Boston Red Stockings ( precursor club to the modern Atlanta Braves ) and was highly successful ; winning 206 games ( and losing only 53 ) as a pitcher and batting. 323 as a hitter.
One of the most successful designs of this period was the Douglas DC-3, which became the first airliner that was profitable carrying passengers exclusively, starting the modern era of passenger airline service.
* Eponymous city of Inganock from Seiken no Inganock: What a Beautiful People is stated to be the first and only successful arcology in its setting.
* 1919 – Leslie Irvin of the United States makes the first successful voluntary free-fall parachute jump using a new kind of self-contained parachute.
Among the most successful of his 37 operas staged during his lifetime were Armida ( 1771 ), La fiera di Venezia ( 1772 ), La scuola de ' gelosi ( 1778 ), Der Rauchfangkehrer ( 1781 ), Les Danaïdes ( 1784 ), which was first presented as a work of Gluck's, La grotta di Trofonio ( 1785 ), Tarare ( 1787 ) ( Tarare was reworked and revised several times as was Les Danaïdes ), Axur, re d ' Ormus ( 1788 ), La cifra ( 1789 ), Palmira, regina di Persia ( 1795 ), Il mondo alla rovescia ( 1795 ), Falstaff ( 1799 ), and Cesare in Farmacusa ( 1800 ).
* 1860 – The first successful United States Pony Express run from Saint Joseph, Missouri to Sacramento, California begins.

first and calculators
The first portable calculators appeared in Japan in 1970, and were soon marketed around the world.
One of the first low-cost calculators was the Sinclair Cambridge, launched in August 1973.
Launched in early 1972 it was unlike the other basic four-function pocket calculators then available in that it was the first pocket calculator with scientific functions that could replace a slide rule.
This would be the first in a line of construction related calculators.
The first desktop programmable calculators were produced in the mid-1960s by Mathatronics and Casio ( AL-1000 ).
In the mid-1970s the first calculators appeared with field-effect, Twisted Nematic TN LCDs with dark numerals against a grey background, though the early ones often had a yellow filter over them to cut out damaging ultraviolet rays.
This led the way to the first credit-card-sized calculators, such as the Casio Mini Card LC-78 of 1978, which could run for months of normal use on button cells.
According to Mark Bollman, a mathematics and calculator historian and associate professor of mathematics at Albion College, the " Construction Master is the first in a long and profitable line of CI construction calculators " which carried them through the 1980s, 1990s, and to the present.
Working in isolation in Germany, Konrad Zuse started construction in 1936 of his first Z-series calculators featuring memory and ( initially limited ) programmability.
The 8080 has sometimes been labeled " the first truly usable microprocessor ", although earlier microprocessors were used for calculators and other applications.
The first commercial LEDs were commonly used as replacements for incandescent and neon indicator lamps, and in seven-segment displays, first in expensive equipment such as laboratory and electronics test equipment, then later in such appliances as TVs, radios, telephones, calculators, and even watches ( see list of signal uses ).
The first microprocessors emerged in the early 1970s and were used for electronic calculators, using binary-coded decimal ( BCD ) arithmetic on 4-bit words ..
The introduction of his Pascaline in 1645 launched the development of mechanical calculators first in Europe and then all over the world.
Gottfried Leibniz ( 1646 – 1716 ), building on Pascal's work, became one of the most prolific inventors in the field of mechanical calculators ; he was the first to describe a pinwheel calculator in 1685 and invented the Leibniz wheel, used in the arithmometer, the first mass-produced mechanical calculator.
The first microprocessor for example, the Intel 4004, was designed for calculators and other small systems but still required many external memory and support chips.
The very first large " programmable calculators / computers " ( machines lacking keyboards for text input ) were marketed in the second half of the 1960s, starting with Programma 101 ( 1965 ) and HP 9100 ( 1968 ).
It was during this trip that Tramiel saw the first digital calculators, and decided that the mechanical adding machine was a dead end.
When Commodore released its first calculators, combining an LED display from Bowmar and an integrated circuit from Texas Instruments ( TI ), it found a ready market.
The first PET computers were sold primarily in Europe, where Commodore had also introduced the first wave of digital handheld calculators.
They also appeared in costly digital time displays used in research and military establishments, and in many early electronic desktop calculators, including the first: the Sumlock-Comptometer ANITA Mk VII of 1961 and even the first electronic telephone switchboards.

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