Word: exhaustingly
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Earlier researchers found that ordinary maple syrup afforded high resistance to ice; but was easily "scrubbed" off by the wind. Working along other lines, experimenters tried heating the wing edge by an extended exhaust pipe. They found ice would form behind the pipe nearly as heavily as along the edge...
...When the muscles are working so fast that they cannot get enough oxygen for their recovery process," Dr. Dill explained, "lactic acid accumulates in them and leaks out into the blood, producing or tending to produce exhaustion. We placed DeMar on our horizontal treadmill, geared to a speed of 9.3 kilometers an hour, and found that the amount of exhaust acid he had accumulated at the end of twenty minutes was almost negligible...
...United States itself," said Rear Admiral W. S. Sims, U. S. N. (retired) in an informal talk to members of Naval Science classes in the Old Fogg lecture room yesterday afternoon. Admiral Sims explained that an invading fleet which had captured, for example, Montauk Point, would soon exhaust its fuel cruising to escape American submarines, and that its airplane carriers would be ineffectual against the superior numbers of the defending air fleet, which would stage a bombing at its leisure. "The best the invaders could do," said the Admiral, "would be to place the ball of their thumbs on their...
Last week Professor Joseph Christie Whitney Frazer, 54, of Johns Hopkins University, felt the intimation of such fortune. He is a chemist who has made a thoroughgoing study of gas adsorption and of catalysts. His knowledge he recently applied to motor exhaust CO, inventing a way of detoxicating it. What his process is he refused to explain publicly last week. A patent was not yet granted. In effect, he has found a catalyst which will quickly, cheaply, thoroughly get CO turned into C02 before it leaves the automobile. The catalyst is placed in the exhaust pipe line. How best...
...declared the police surgeon, from carbon monoxide swore a private physician who had noted the pinkness of the victims' bloods. Professors Haldane and Hill read newspaper accounts of the driver's jeopardy and voluntarily went to court, where they convinced the magistrate: that the car's exhaust pipe was clogged with water, that the gas had escaped into the closed car through a pipe leak, that the men had died within the short period of 15 minutes because even a slight amount of imbibed alcohol increases a person's susceptibility to carbon monoxide intoxication, that...