Word: droppings
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...jolt that is rough on the missile's complex guidance systems; the Navy insists that it can control the blastoff, but it has not yet tested its technique on the missile. Another key problem: how to shut off the solid-charge propulsion at the precise point needed to drop the missile on target (in lox missiles this is accomplished by turning off a valve). The Navy says it has solved this problem in the laboratories and on test vehicles, admits it has yet to test it out on a missile...
...Drop of a Hat (Michael Flanders and Donald Swann; Angel). An irreverent, off-key assault on an assortment of sacred cows by the two-man cast of a witty London revue. They warble their uncertain, Oxford-accented way through a series of wandering digressions on the London bus system (A Transport of Delight), the morals of the clubman (Madeira, M'Dear?), the woes of the hi-fi fan ("What do you get? Flutter on your bottom"). They do their best work, Flanders howls, in a snug little house in "an amusing mews," where...
...practices by inexperienced officials as heavy overpayment for a batch of air conditioners and the "economy" of firing 17 city attorneys and replacing them with 19 at the cost of an extra $13,500. Needling Murray's personal foibles, Gene Farrell even told rewrite men and reporters to drop the Jr. from his name...
...only fudging their earlier estimates of 6,100,000 new cars next year. They sold about 5,800,000 in 1957 and at year's end estimated sales of about 5,500,000 in 1958. As for the troubled railroads, they will see still another 5% to 7% drop in passenger traffic, while freight car loadings will show a continuing, but smaller (less than 10%), decline than in 1957. U.S. industry's headlong expansion will taper off in 1958; industry will invest only $34.5 billion in new plants and machines, down 7% from 1957. Autos, aluminum, machinery...
...boom eased in the U.S., it was also easing around the world, bringing a drop in the demand for U.S. goods. The record dollar value of U.S. exports ($19.5 billion in 1957) and imports ($12.7 billion) may slip less than 5% in 1958. One of the major battles of 1958 will be over U.S. tariff walls and reciprocal trade pacts, with traders insisting that the U.S. does not buy enough and protectionists insisting that it buys too much. Yet in 1957, an encouraging answer to critics who say the U.S. does not trade enough was the case of foreign automakers...