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field+manager

  • 81 Projektingenieur

    Projektingenieur m project engineer, planning engineer (für Projektplanung); project manager, project representative, field representative (für Bauausführung, Projektrealisierung)

    Deutsch-Englisch Fachwörterbuch Architektur und Bauwesen > Projektingenieur

  • 82 притчи Христовы

    (в Новом Завете притчи Христовы выступают как собственная и особая форма учения Иисуса) the parables of Christ

    притча о безумном [безрассудном] богаче — the parable of the foolish rich man, the parable of the rich fool

    притча о (благоразумном) домоправителе — the parable of the shrewd manager, the parable of faithful and wise steward

    притча о брачном пире, притча о брачной одежде — the parable of the wedding feast, the parable of the marriage of the King's son

    притча о виноградаряхсм. притча о работниках [делателях] в винограднике

    притча о двух сыновьях — the parable of the two sons, the parable of the father and two sons

    притча о доме, построенном на камне (и о доме, построенном на песке) — the parable of the houses on rock and on sand

    притча о женихе и сынах брака (, приглашённых на свадьбу) — the parable of the bridegroom's guests

    притча о мытаре и фарисее — the parable of Pharisee and the tax collector, the parable of the publican and the Pharisee

    притча о немилосердном рабесм. притча о непрощающем слуге

    притча о неправедном судиисм.притча о судье неправедном

    притча о произрастающем семени — the parable of the growing seed, the parable of the growth of a seed of grain

    притча о пшенице и плевелах, притча о добром семени — the parable of tares among the wheat, the parable of the weed among the wheat, the parable of the weeds

    притча о рабе, пришедшем с поля — the parable of the servant who has come from the field

    притча о работниках [делателях] в винограднике — the parable of the tenants in the vineyard

    притча о светильнике под сосудом [спудом] — the parable of the lamp under a bowl

    притча о судье неправедном — the parable of the unrighteous judge, the parable of the widow and the judge

    притча о трёх рабах, притча о талантах — the parable of the three servants

    Русско-английский словарь религиозной лексики > притчи Христовы

  • 83 главная контора

    Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > главная контора

  • 84 заведующий отделением

    Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > заведующий отделением

  • 85 юридическая контора

    1. law office
    2. law offices

    главная контора; главная редакция; штабmain office

    местная контора; местное отделениеfield office

    главная контора, правлениеhead office

    Русско-английский большой базовый словарь > юридическая контора

  • 86 résumé

    HR
    a document that provides a summary of personal career history, skills, and experience. A résumé is usually prepared to aid in a job application. A job advertisement may ask either for a résumé or instead may require a candidate to complete an application form.
         Every résumé should include the following: the jobseeker’s name and contact details; a clear and concise description of his or her career objective; some kind of outline of work experience; and a list of education and qualifications. It is important to customize a résumé to the type of job or career being applied for, and to make sure it has impact: a hiring manager receives an average of over 120 résumés for every job opening.
         There are four basic types of résumé: the chronological, the functional, the targeted, and the capabilities résumé. A chronological résumé is useful for people who stay in the same field and do not make major career changes. They should start with and focus on the most recent positions held. A functional résumé is the preferred choice for those seeking their first professional job, or those making a major career change. It is based around 3–5 paragraphs, each emphasizing and illustrating a particular skill or accomplishment. A targeted résumé is useful for jobseekers who are very clear about their job direction and need to make an impressive case for a specific job. Like a functional résumé, it should be based around several capabilities and accomplishments that are relevant to the target job, focusing on action and results. A capabilities résumé is used for people applying for a specific job within their current organization. It should focus on 5–8 skills and accomplishments achieved with the company.
         The format of a résumé should also be considered—whether it is to be printed out, incorporated into an e-mail, posted on a Web site, or burned onto a CD-ROM. Different layout and design elements, such as the choice of fonts or inclusion of multimedia, are suitable for each medium, and should be thought through carefully.
    U.K. term CV

    The ultimate business dictionary > résumé

  • 87 Ayre, Sir Amos Lowrey

    SUBJECT AREA: Ports and shipping
    [br]
    b. 23 July 1885 South Shields, England
    d. 13 January 1952 London, England
    [br]
    English shipbuilder and pioneer of the inter-war "economy" freighters; Chairman of the Shipbuilding Conference.
    [br]
    Amos Ayre grew up on the Tyne with the stimulus of shipbuilding and seafaring around him. After an apprenticeship as a ship draughtsman and distinction in his studies, he held responsible posts in the shipyards of Belfast and later Dublin. His first dramatic move came in 1909 when he accepted the post of Manager of the new Employment Exchange at Govan, then just outside Glasgow. During the First World War he was in charge of fleet coaling operations on the River Forth, and later was promoted Admiralty District Director for shipyard labour in Scotland.
    Before the conclusion of hostilities, with his brother Wilfrid (later Sir Wilfrid Ayre) he founded the Burntisland Shipbuilding Company in Fife. Setting up on a green field site allowed the brothers to show innovation in design, production and marketing. Such was their success that the new yard was busy throughout the Depression, building standard ships which incorporated low operating costs with simplicity of construction.
    Through public service culminating in the 1929 Safety of Life at Sea Conference, Amos Ayre became recognized not only as an eminent naval architect, but also as a skilled negotiator. In 1936 he was invited to become Chairman of the Shipbuilding Conference and thereby virtual leader of the industry. As war approached he planned with meticulous care the rearrangement of national shipbuilding capacity, enabling Britain to produce standard hulls ranging from the legendary TID tugs to the standard freighters built in Sunderland or Port Glasgow. In 1939 he became Director of Merchant Shipbuilding, a position he held until 1944, when with typical foresight he asked to be released to plan for shipbuilding's return to normality.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knighted 1937. KBE 1943. Officer of the Order of Orange-Nassau.
    Bibliography
    1919, "The theory and design of British shipbuilding", The Syren and Shipping, London.
    Further Reading
    Wilfrid Ayre, 1968, A Shipbuilders Yesterdays, Fife (published privately). James Reid, 1964, James Lithgow, Master of Work, London.
    Maurice E.Denny, 1955, "The man and his work" (First Amos Ayre Lecture), Transactions of the Institution of Naval Architects vol. 97.
    FMW

    Biographical history of technology > Ayre, Sir Amos Lowrey

  • 88 Benton, Linn Boyd

    SUBJECT AREA: Paper and printing
    [br]
    b. 13 May 1844 Little Falls, New York, USA
    d. 15 July 1932 Plainfield, New Jersey, USA
    [br]
    American typefounder, cutter and designer, inventor of the automatic punch-cutting machine.
    [br]
    Benton spent his childhood in Milwaukee and La Crosse, where he early showed a talent for mechanical invention. His father was a lawyer with an interest in newspapers and who acquired the Milwaukee Daily News. Benton became familiar with typesetting equipment in his father's newspaper office. He learned the printer's trade at another newspaper office, at La Crosse, and later worked as bookkeeper at a type foundry in Milwaukee. When that failed in 1873, Benton acquired the plant, and when he was joined by R.V.Waldo the firm became Benton, Waldo \& Co. Benton began learning and improving type-cutting practice. He first devised unit-width or "self-spacing" type which became popular with compositors, saving, it was reckoned, 20 per cent of their time. Meanwhile, Benton worked on a punch-cutting machine to speed up the process of cutting letters in the steel punches from which matrices or moulds were formed to enable type to be cast from molten metal. His first mechanical punch-cutter worked successfully in 1884. The third machine, patented in 1885, was the model that revolutionized the typefounding operation. So far, punch-cutting had been done by hand, a rare and expensive skill that was insufficient to meet the demands of the new typesetting machines, the monotype of Lanston and the linotype of Merganthaler. These were threatened with failure until Benton saved the day with his automatic punch-cutter. Mechanizing punch-cutting and the forming of matrices made possible the typesetting revolution brought about by mono-and linotype.
    In 1892 Benton's firm merged with others to form the American Type Founders Company. Benton's equipment was moved to New York and he with it, to become a board member and Chief Technical Advisor. In 1894 he became Manager of the company's new plant for type manufacture in Jersey City. Benton steadily improved both machinery and processes, for which he was granted twenty patents. With his son Morris Fuller, he was also notable and prolific in the field of type design. Benton remained in active association with his company until just two weeks before his death.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Obituary, 1932, Inland Printer (August): 53–4.
    P.Cost, 1985, "The contributions of Lyn [sic] Boyd Benton and Morris Fuller Benton to the technology of typesetting and the art of typeface design", unpublished MSc thesis, Rochester Institute of Technology (the most thorough treatment).
    H.L.Bullen, 1922, Inland Printer (October) (describes Benton's life and work).
    LRD

    Biographical history of technology > Benton, Linn Boyd

  • 89 Bright, Sir Charles Tilston

    SUBJECT AREA: Telecommunications
    [br]
    b. 8 June 1832 Wanstead, Essex, England
    d. 3 May 1888 Abbey Wood, London, England
    [br]
    English telegraph engineer responsible for laying the first transatlantic cable.
    [br]
    At the age of 15 years Bright left the London Merchant Taylors' School to join the two-year-old Electric Telegraph Company. By 1851 he was in charge of the Birmingham telegraph station. After a short time as Assistant Engineer with the newly formed British Telegraph Company, he joined his brother (who was Manager) as Engineer-in-Chief of the English and Irish Magnetic Telegraph Company in Liverpool, for which he laid thousands of miles of underground cable and developed a number of innovations in telegraphy including a resistance box for locating cable faults and a two-tone bell system for signalling. In 1853 he was responsible for the first successful underwater cable between Scotland and Ireland. Three years later, with the American financier Cyrus Field and John Brett, he founded and was Engineer-in-chief of the Atlantic Telegraph Company, which aimed at laying a cable between Ireland and Newfoundland. After several unsuccessful attempts this was finally completed on 5 August 1858, Bright was knighted a month later, but the cable then failed! In 1860 Bright resigned from the Magnetic Telegraph Company to set up an independent consultancy with another engineer, Joseph Latimer Clark, with whom he invented an improved bituminous cable insulation. Two years later he supervised construction of a telegraph cable to India, and in 1865 a further attempt to lay an Atlantic cable using Brunel's new ship, the Great Eastern. This cable broke during laying, but in 1866 a new cable was at last successfully laid and the 1865 cable recovered and repaired. The year 1878 saw extension of the Atlantic cable system to the West Indies and the invention with his brother of a system of neighbourhood fire alarms and even an automatic fire alarm.
    In 1861 Bright presented a paper to the British Association for the Advancement of Science on the need for electrical standards, leading to the creation of an organization that still exists in the 1990s. From 1865 until 1868 he was Liberal MP for Greenwich, and he later assisted with preparations for the 1881 Paris Exhibition.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Knighted 1858. Légion d'honneur. First President, Société Internationale des Electriciens. President, Society of Telegraph Engineers \& Electricians (later the Institution of Electrical Engineers) 1887.
    Bibliography
    1852, British patent (resistance box).
    1855, British patent no. 2,103 (two-tone bell system). 1878, British patent no. 3,801 (area fire alarms).
    1878, British patent no. 596 (automatic fire alarm).
    "The physical \& electrical effects of pressure \& temperature on submarine cable cores", Journal of the Institution of Electrical Engineers XVII (describes some of his investigations of cable characteristics).
    Further Reading
    C.Bright, 1898, Submarine Cables, Their History, Construction \& Working.
    —1910, The Life Story of Sir Charles Tilston Bright, London: Constable \& Co.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Bright, Sir Charles Tilston

  • 90 Kapp, Gisbert Johann Eduard Karl

    SUBJECT AREA: Electricity
    [br]
    b. 2 September 1852 Mauer, Vienna, Austria
    d. 10 August 1922 Birmingham, England
    [br]
    Austrian (naturalized British in 1881) engineer and a pioneer of dynamo design, being particularly associated with the concept of the magnetic circuit.
    [br]
    Kapp entered the Polytechnic School in Zurich in 1869 and gained a mechanical engineering diploma. He became a member of the engineering staff at the Vienna International Exhibition of 1873, and then spent some time in the Austrian navy before entering the service of Gwynne \& Co. of London, where he designed centrifugal pumps and gas exhausters. Kapp resolved to become an electrical engineer after a visit to the Paris Electrical Exhibition of 1881 and in the following year was appointed Manager of the Crompton Co. works at Chelmsford. There he developed and patented the dynamo with compound field winding. Also at that time, with Crompton, he patented electrical measuring instruments with over-saturated electromagnets. He became a naturalized British subject in 1881.
    In 1886 Kapp's most influential paper was published. This described his concept of the magnetic circuit, providing for the first time a sound theoretical basis for dynamo design. The theory was also developed independently by J. Hopkinson. After commencing practice as a consulting engineer in 1884 he carried out design work on dynamos and also electricity-supply and -traction schemes in Germany, Italy, Norway, Russia and Switzerland. From 1891 to 1894 much of his time was spent designing a new generating station in Bristol, officially as Assistant to W.H. Preece. There followed an appointment in Germany as General Secretary of the Verband Deutscher Electrotechniker. For some years he edited the Electrotechnische Zeitschrift and was also a part-time lecturer at the Charlottenberg Technical High School in Berlin. In 1904 Kapp was invited to accept the new Chair of Electrical Engineering at the University of Birmingham, which he occupied until 1919. He was the author of several books on electrical machine and transformer design.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Institution of Civil Engineers Telford Medal 1886 and 1888. President, Institution of Electrical Engineers 1909.
    Bibliography
    10 October 1882, with R.E.B.Crompton, British patent no. 4,810; (the compound wound dynamo).
    1886, "Modern continuous current dynamo electric machines and their engines", Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers 83: 123–54.
    Further Reading
    D.G.Tucker, 1989, "A new archive of Gisbert Kapp papers", Proceedings of the Meeting on History of Electrical Engineering, IEE 4/1–4/11 (a transcript of an autobiography for his family).
    D.G.Tucker, 1973, Gisbert Kapp 1852–1922, Birmingham: Birmingham University (includes a bibliography of his most important publications).
    GW

    Biographical history of technology > Kapp, Gisbert Johann Eduard Karl

  • 91 Smith, Willoughby

    [br]
    b. 16 April 1828 Great Yarmouth, England
    d. 17 July 1891 Eastbourne, England
    [br]
    English engineer of submarine telegraph cables who observed that light reduced the resistance of selenium.
    [br]
    Smith joined the Gutta Percha Company, London, in 1848 and successfully experimented with the use of gutta-percha, a natural form of latex, for the insulation of conducting wires. As a result, he was made responsible for the laying of the first cross-Channel cable between Dover and Calais in 1850. Four years later he laid the first Mediterranean cable between Spezia, Italy, and Corsica and Sardinia, later extending it to Algeria. On its completion he became Manager of the Gutta Percha works, which in 1864 became the Telegraph and Construction Company. In 1865 he assisted on board the Great Eastern with the laying of the transatlantic cable by Bright.
    Clearly his management responsibilities did not stop him from experimenting practically. In 1866 he discovered that the resistance of a selenium rod was reduced by the action of incident light, an early discovery of the photoelectric effect more explicitly observed by Hertz and subsequently explained by Einstein. In 1883 he read a paper to the Society of Telegraph Engineers (later the Institution of Electrical Engineers), suggesting the possibility of wireless communication with moving trains, an idea that was later successfully taken up by others, and in 1888 he demonstrated the use of water as a practical means of communication with a lighthouse. Four years later, after his death, the system was tried between Alum Bay and the Needles in the Isle of Wight, and it was used subsequently for the Fastnet Rock lighthouse some 10 miles (16 km) off the south-west coast of Ireland.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Founder and Council Member of the Society of Telegraph Engineers 1871; President 1873.
    Bibliography
    The effect of light on the resistance of selenium was reported in a letter to the Vice- Chairman of the Society of Telegraph Engineers on 4 February 1873.
    7 June 1897, British patent no. 8,159 (the use of water, instead of cable, as a conductor).
    November 1888, article in Electrician (describes his idea of using water as a conductor, rather than cable).
    Further Reading
    E.Hawkes, 1927, Pioneers of Wireless, London: Methuen.
    C.T.Bright, 1898, Submarine Cables, Their History, Construction and Working.
    KF

    Biographical history of technology > Smith, Willoughby

  • 92 סנטר

    סַנְטֵר, סַנְטֵירm. (preced.) 1) guardsman, bailiff. B. Bath.IV, 7 המוכר … מכר את הס׳ if one sells a township, he sells with it the sanṭer (a slave, v. אִיקוֹנוֹמוֹס); expl. ib. 68a בר מחווניתא, v. מַחְוָונִיתָא; (oth. opin. ib. באגי the fields around the town); Tosef. ib. III, 5. Snh.98b פגע בו ס׳ a bailiff meets him (trying to contest his title to the field). Y.B. Mets.V, 10c ישראל שמינה … או ס׳ an Israelite who appointed a gentile his manager or guardsman. Gitt.80b אפי׳ … לשם ס׳ שבעיר even if he dates a letter of divorce from the rule of a bailiff of the town. Tanḥ. Brakhah 6 כס׳ הזהוכ׳ like the guardsman that speaks before the king; a. e. 2) the guarded land outside of a township. B. Bath. l. c., v. supra. 3) (cmp. meanings of לֶחִי, and phrases like שמר פתחי פיך, Mic. 7:5) ( fence, jaw, jaw-bone, chin. Ber.24b וכשהוא … מניח ידו על סַנְטֵרוֹ (Ms. M. סַנְטֵירוֹ) and when he yawned, he put his hand on his chin (to cover his mouth). 4) a sort of cloak, sanṭer (cmp. גּוּנְדָּא II). Treat. Der. Er. ch. XI סַנְטֵרוֹ לצדדין וקובעווכ׳ he who walks with his sanṭer hanging sideways and his cap turned back …, belongs to the haughty.

    Jewish literature > סנטר

  • 93 סנטיר

    סַנְטֵר, סַנְטֵירm. (preced.) 1) guardsman, bailiff. B. Bath.IV, 7 המוכר … מכר את הס׳ if one sells a township, he sells with it the sanṭer (a slave, v. אִיקוֹנוֹמוֹס); expl. ib. 68a בר מחווניתא, v. מַחְוָונִיתָא; (oth. opin. ib. באגי the fields around the town); Tosef. ib. III, 5. Snh.98b פגע בו ס׳ a bailiff meets him (trying to contest his title to the field). Y.B. Mets.V, 10c ישראל שמינה … או ס׳ an Israelite who appointed a gentile his manager or guardsman. Gitt.80b אפי׳ … לשם ס׳ שבעיר even if he dates a letter of divorce from the rule of a bailiff of the town. Tanḥ. Brakhah 6 כס׳ הזהוכ׳ like the guardsman that speaks before the king; a. e. 2) the guarded land outside of a township. B. Bath. l. c., v. supra. 3) (cmp. meanings of לֶחִי, and phrases like שמר פתחי פיך, Mic. 7:5) ( fence, jaw, jaw-bone, chin. Ber.24b וכשהוא … מניח ידו על סַנְטֵרוֹ (Ms. M. סַנְטֵירוֹ) and when he yawned, he put his hand on his chin (to cover his mouth). 4) a sort of cloak, sanṭer (cmp. גּוּנְדָּא II). Treat. Der. Er. ch. XI סַנְטֵרוֹ לצדדין וקובעווכ׳ he who walks with his sanṭer hanging sideways and his cap turned back …, belongs to the haughty.

    Jewish literature > סנטיר

  • 94 סַנְטֵר

    סַנְטֵר, סַנְטֵירm. (preced.) 1) guardsman, bailiff. B. Bath.IV, 7 המוכר … מכר את הס׳ if one sells a township, he sells with it the sanṭer (a slave, v. אִיקוֹנוֹמוֹס); expl. ib. 68a בר מחווניתא, v. מַחְוָונִיתָא; (oth. opin. ib. באגי the fields around the town); Tosef. ib. III, 5. Snh.98b פגע בו ס׳ a bailiff meets him (trying to contest his title to the field). Y.B. Mets.V, 10c ישראל שמינה … או ס׳ an Israelite who appointed a gentile his manager or guardsman. Gitt.80b אפי׳ … לשם ס׳ שבעיר even if he dates a letter of divorce from the rule of a bailiff of the town. Tanḥ. Brakhah 6 כס׳ הזהוכ׳ like the guardsman that speaks before the king; a. e. 2) the guarded land outside of a township. B. Bath. l. c., v. supra. 3) (cmp. meanings of לֶחִי, and phrases like שמר פתחי פיך, Mic. 7:5) ( fence, jaw, jaw-bone, chin. Ber.24b וכשהוא … מניח ידו על סַנְטֵרוֹ (Ms. M. סַנְטֵירוֹ) and when he yawned, he put his hand on his chin (to cover his mouth). 4) a sort of cloak, sanṭer (cmp. גּוּנְדָּא II). Treat. Der. Er. ch. XI סַנְטֵרוֹ לצדדין וקובעווכ׳ he who walks with his sanṭer hanging sideways and his cap turned back …, belongs to the haughty.

    Jewish literature > סַנְטֵר

  • 95 סַנְטֵיר

    סַנְטֵר, סַנְטֵירm. (preced.) 1) guardsman, bailiff. B. Bath.IV, 7 המוכר … מכר את הס׳ if one sells a township, he sells with it the sanṭer (a slave, v. אִיקוֹנוֹמוֹס); expl. ib. 68a בר מחווניתא, v. מַחְוָונִיתָא; (oth. opin. ib. באגי the fields around the town); Tosef. ib. III, 5. Snh.98b פגע בו ס׳ a bailiff meets him (trying to contest his title to the field). Y.B. Mets.V, 10c ישראל שמינה … או ס׳ an Israelite who appointed a gentile his manager or guardsman. Gitt.80b אפי׳ … לשם ס׳ שבעיר even if he dates a letter of divorce from the rule of a bailiff of the town. Tanḥ. Brakhah 6 כס׳ הזהוכ׳ like the guardsman that speaks before the king; a. e. 2) the guarded land outside of a township. B. Bath. l. c., v. supra. 3) (cmp. meanings of לֶחִי, and phrases like שמר פתחי פיך, Mic. 7:5) ( fence, jaw, jaw-bone, chin. Ber.24b וכשהוא … מניח ידו על סַנְטֵרוֹ (Ms. M. סַנְטֵירוֹ) and when he yawned, he put his hand on his chin (to cover his mouth). 4) a sort of cloak, sanṭer (cmp. גּוּנְדָּא II). Treat. Der. Er. ch. XI סַנְטֵרוֹ לצדדין וקובעווכ׳ he who walks with his sanṭer hanging sideways and his cap turned back …, belongs to the haughty.

    Jewish literature > סַנְטֵיר

См. также в других словарях:

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  • field sales — UK US noun [U] MARKETING, COMMERCE ► the activity of selling a company s products or services outside the office: field sales force/representative/team »In this way, a manager can issue a memo to his entire field sales force at minimal cost …   Financial and business terms

  • field sales manager — A district or regional sales manager (so called because his or her main concern is the control of salespeople in the field). The primary task of the field sales manager is to motivate and supervise sales personnel. Depending on the organization,… …   Big dictionary of business and management

  • Manager (Gaelic games) — In Gaelic games, a manager or coach (Irish: Bainisteoir) is an individual involved in the direction and instruction of the on field operations of a team. Managing, or coaching, entails the application of sport tactics and strategies during the… …   Wikipedia

  • Field Device Tool — FDT/DTM ist ein herstellerübergreifendes Konzept, welches die Parametrierung von Feldgeräten verschiedener Hersteller mit nur einem Programm ermöglicht. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 FDT/DTM kurz gesagt 2 Das Problem und die Lösung 2.1 DTM 2.2 FDT …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • field sales force — /fi:ld seɪlz fɔ:s/ noun salespeople working outside the company’s offices, in the field ● After working for a year in the field sales force, she became field sales manager. ● The field sales force operates in three main areas …   Marketing dictionary in english

  • field sales manager — /fi:ld seɪlz ˌmænɪdʒə/ noun the manager in charge of a group of salespeople …   Marketing dictionary in english

  • Field hockey at the 1948 Summer Olympics - Men's team squads — *GK=Goalkeeper *B=Back *HB=Halfback *FW=ForwardflagIOC|AFG|1948 SummerflagIOC|ARG|1948 SummerflagIOC|AUT|1948 SummerHead coach: flagIOC|BEL|1948 SummerflagIOC|DEN|1948 SummerflagIOC|FRA|1948 SummerflagIOC|GBR|1948 SummerflagIOC|IND|1948… …   Wikipedia

  • Field hockey at the 1936 Summer Olympics - Men's team squads — *GK=Goalkeeper *B=Back *HB=Halfback *FW=ForwardflagIOC|AFG|1936 SummerAfganistan had a squad of 18 players five of them are unknown. They scored seven goals but only one scorer is known.Head coach: flagIOC|FRA|1936 SummerFrance had a squad of 22… …   Wikipedia

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