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  2. Delta Air Lines Flight 1989 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delta_Air_Lines_Flight_1989

    Survivors. 78. Delta Air Lines Flight 1989 was a regularly scheduled flight offering nonstop morning service on September 11, 2001, from Logan International Airport to Los Angeles International Airport on a Boeing 767-300ER aircraft. This flight was one of several flights considered as possibly hijacked, but landed safely at Cleveland Hopkins ...

  3. Delta Delta Delta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delta_Delta_Delta

    Delta Delta Delta. Delta Delta Delta ( ΔΔΔ ), also known as Tri Delta, is a global [2] women's fraternity and Greek life organization founded on November 27, 1888 at Boston University by Sarah Ida Shaw, Eleanor Dorcas Pond, Isabel Morgan Breed, and Florence Isabelle Stewart. With over 200,000 living initiates at 141 chapters and over $450M ...

  4. Delta Burke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delta_Burke

    Delta Burke. Delta Burke (born July 30, 1956) [1] is an American actress, producer, and author. From 1986 to 1991, she starred as Suzanne Sugarbaker in the CBS sitcom Designing Women, for which she was nominated for two Emmy Awards for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series . Burke's other television credits include Filthy Rich (1982–83 ...

  5. Deltacom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deltacom

    Deltacom, Inc. Deltacom, known as ITC^Deltacom until 2006, was a regional competitive local exchange carrier operating in the southern United States, primarily in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee. Deltacom provided local telephone service and long distance calling, Internet service ...

  6. Delta Works - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delta_Works

    Delta Works. The Delta Works ( Dutch: Deltawerken) is a series of construction projects in the southwest of the Netherlands to protect a large area of land around the Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt delta from the sea. Constructed between 1954 and 1997, the works consist of dams, sluices, locks, dykes, levees, and storm surge barriers located in the ...

  7. ε-net - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ε-net

    ε-net. An -net or epsilon net in mathematics may refer to: ε-net (computational geometry) in computational geometry and in geometric probability theory. ε-net (metric spaces) in metric spaces. Category: Set index articles on mathematics.

  8. Distance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distance

    The distance between two points in physical space is the length of a straight line between them, which is the shortest possible path. This is the usual meaning of distance in classical physics, including Newtonian mechanics. Straight-line distance is formalized mathematically as the Euclidean distance in two- and three-dimensional space.

  9. Siamese neural network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siamese_neural_network

    A Siamese neural network (sometimes called a twin neural network) is an artificial neural network that uses the same weights while working in tandem on two different input vectors to compute comparable output vectors.