| International Civil Aviation Conference - 1945 - 326 lapas
...IDENTIFICATION MARKS DEFINITIONS (a) Aircraft. Aircraft shall comprise all apparatus or contrivances which can derive support in the atmosphere from reactions of the air. (b) Aerostat. Aerostat shall mean an aircraft supported in the air statically. (c) Balloon. Balloon... | |
| United States. Department of State - 1945 - 298 lapas
...IDENTIFICATION MARKS DEFINITIONS (a) Aircraft. Aircraft shall comprise all apparatus or contrivances which can derive support in the atmosphere from reactions of the air. (b) Aerostat. Aerostat shall mean an aircraft supported in the air statically. (c) Balloon. Balloon... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Special Committee on Space and Astronautics - 1958 - 980 lapas
...without defining it except in annexed wording close to the formula of the Paris Convention of 1919: "all centralized responsibility would be ves@ , for space development plans. Such 3* The flight of pilotless aircraft over the territory of non-consenting states is prohibited by Article... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Special Committee on Space and Astronautics - 1959 - 612 lapas
...the annex dealing with registration, and the other regulatory annexes, was defined as comprising "all machines which can derive support in the atmosphere from reactions of the air." Later international conventions, and many national statutes, incorporated assertions of national airspace... | |
| William Strauss - 1961 - 1486 lapas
...Act, unless there is anything repugnant in the subject or context — (1) "aircraft" means any machine which can derive support in the atmosphere from reactions of the air, and includes balloons whether fixed or free, airships, kites, gliders and flying machines ; (2) "aerodrome"... | |
| United States Air Force Academy - 1964 - 374 lapas
...Identical language is used in the Paris Convention of 1919 and the superseding Chicago Convention of 1944. In each case the phraseology is in terms of "air,"...the atmosphere from reactions of the air. There is a general agreement among the writers that the draftsmen of the pertinent sections of the Paris and... | |
| J. H. W. Verzijl - 1971 - 336 lapas
...which the simple fact that the Paris and Chicago Convention Annexes define aircraft as 'any machine which can derive support in the atmosphere from reactions of the air' does not justify the conclusion that airspace also is to be understood as confined to that volume of... | |
| Myres S Mac Dougal - 1987 - 1092 lapas
...without defining it except in annexed wording close to the formula of the Paris Convention of 1919: "all machines which can derive support in the atmosphere from reactions of the air." 34 The flight of pilotless aircraft over the territory of nonconsenting states is prohibited by Article... | |
| J. H. W. Verzijl - 1971 - 336 lapas
...which the simple fact that the Paris and Chicago Convention Annexes define aircraft as 'any machine which can derive support in the atmosphere from reactions of the air" does not justify the conclusion that airspace also is to be understood as confined to that volume of... | |
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