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Word: drones (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...From the drone of U.N. debate, the words of British Foreign Secretary Lord Home stood out with freshness and clarity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ideology: Home Truths | 10/5/1962 | See Source »

...earned a reputation for big-league engineering triumphs. He had taken charge of RCA's $40 million Talos antiaircraft missile program and had made the complicated bird fly right on its first try. ("The first Talos we fired at White Sands," Holmes remembers with pleasure, "knocked the target drone so flat they couldn't find the engines.") He had bossed the design and construction of BMEWS (Ballistic Missile Early Warning System), the Air Force's gigantic, $1.3 billion northern radar system, and made it a personal triumph. With BMEWS, he proved that he could handle touchy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Reaching for the Moon | 8/10/1962 | See Source »

Nine F-10s Thunderchiefs swooped low, dropped 750-lb. bombs that disintegrated a target supply depot. A dozen F-100 Super Sabres scorched the earth with napalm. A Falcon rocket burst from an F106 Delta Dart, sent a drone aircraft to the ground in blazing bits. As a Tactical Air Command flight of F-105s sped overhead, a simulated nuclear bomb was exploded in a miniature fireball and nonradioactive mushroom cloud. As the waves of noise, heat and blast rolled across Florida's Eglin Air Force Base, Commander in Chief John Kennedy grinned from a rocking chair...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Armed Forces: Operation Silk Hat | 5/11/1962 | See Source »

...exploded just 700 ft. away, shaking the great ship as if it were a dog just out of a bath. Afterward. Kennedy accepted a windbreaker and moved with McNamara to the gusty starboard side of the ship to watch an aerial display. Two Terrier missiles homed in on a drone plane, but missed-although naval officers explained that they would have been close enough to the target if they had been armed with real warheads...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Armed Forces: Overnight Cruise | 4/20/1962 | See Source »

Everyday Din. While it is known that too much noise causes fatigue, irritability, even loss of sexual desire, nobody is yet certain of the effects of the drone of decibels that 20th century Americans have come to accept as normal. "Ears are not damaged by the normal sounds of life," says Newman. But some disagree. Audiologist Moe Bergman, director of the Speech and Hearing Center at Manhattan's Hunter College, studied a group of African tribesmen who never heard any outside noises but jungle sounds, compared his findings with a study of a group of Angelenos who worked...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Design: The Hum | 3/2/1962 | See Source »

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