Word: bowness
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...Bow to Stern. In schoolroom demonstrations, an electromagnetic force is produced by passing electric current through a wire or other conductor suspended in a magnetic field. The current generates a magnetic field around the wire that pushes against the field of the magnet. In an electric motor, current flowing through the armature reacts in the same way against a magnetic field generated by electromagnets. The resulting push, or torque, turns the rotor...
...owners at the same time, earned a reputation for spotting hidden talent in horses that other trainers had given up on. In 1963, he invested $125,000 of Gedney Farm's money in a promising colt named Gun Boat-plus a so-so horse named Gun Bow that was thrown in to sweeten the deal. Gun Boat broke a leg. Gun Bow...
...appearances in 1964, when Jean Kerr wrote a TIME writer into Poor Richard after he had interviewed her for a cover story. The character enters saying, "I'm from TIME magazine." Richard, an alcoholic poet, snaps, or possibly snarls or growls: "I should have known that from the bow tie." (Actually, the incidence of bow ties on TIME...
Only the Carronade was equipped with a fire-control computer, and it was soon beyond repair, owing to a lack of spare parts. Lieut. Commander Roy E. McCoy, 38, who runs the division from his Empire desk aboard the Carronade, quickly jury-rigged an alternative system, known as the "bow and arrow" method. Spotters ashore send target coordinates to the ships' Combat Information Centers, where men with aluminum ballistic slide rules (copied from a cardboard original found aboard one of the ships) swiftly tot up the deflection, angle-bearing and elevation of the rocket launchers. Then, just to make...
...movement, the almost indescribable delicacy of the sixth, and the forthrightness and power of the last made the opening four worth sitting through. To be sure, the quartet demonstrated technical control throughout, particularly in those places in which the music takes on the air of an etude for the bow...