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Word: flytraps (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Office of Research and Inventions). To help solve the Navy's training problems, de Florez gave up a lucrative (about $100,000 a year) practice as consulting engineer to several oil companies. A bland, exuberant genius, he has invented scores of big and little gadgets (including an electric flytrap at the age of eleven). He originated most of the 1,475 projects completed by his office to date, was rewarded with the Legion of Merit last month...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: It's Fun | 7/2/1945 | See Source »

Among the most elaborate trapping mechanisms is that of the Dionaea (Venus's-flytrap). Indigenous to North and South Carolina, the Dionaea is a rosette of leaves, three to six inches across, rising from a rootstock more or less horizontally. The upper part of the leaf consists of two dished lobes whose outer margins have a row of coarse teeth. The plant appears to have been discovered by Colonial Governor Arthur Dobbs of North Carolina...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Pitfalls and Lobster Pots | 2/15/1943 | See Source »

...glittery Amanda, an ambitious historical novelist, and Julian, the cold, glittery millionaire publisher whom she lures to a marriage bed with no more than "her usual annoyance at the damage to her permanent." It is also the story of ever-maudlin Ken, a kind of tame Venus's-flytrap, whom Amanda keeps around less for biological than for decorative reasons. Ken might have gone on being a tame cat indefinitely but for a quiet little country mouse named Vicky ("I like furniture and houses all warm and used and kind"), who gobbled him up when Amanda was busy riding...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Feast of Peanut Brittle | 9/7/1942 | See Source »

...Venus Flytrap and the Pitcher plant are the two insect eating varieties in the collection. The former closes its many jaws on juicy morsels of flies and slugs and it gradually absorbs them as its means of sustenance. The latter is more subtle and lazy--it makes no motions. Insects are lured into its pitcher-like growths and are so tangled and dazed by the intricacies within that they never return to daylight. Then there is the strange White Galla plant which spurts water from the tips of its leaves under a bright light...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: INSECT-EATERS, SQUIRTERS AMONG GREEN HOUSE FLORA | 3/19/1938 | See Source »

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