Word: hahn
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...Seelbach, Yale 5 8 9 25 Hasslinger, Columbia 2 8 5 21 Wightman, Yale 5 7 6 20 Viguers, Pennsylvania 3 7 2 16 Caputo, Pennsylvania 3 5 4 14 Vogi, Yale 5 4 6 14 Pearson, Dartmouth 3 6 1 13 Parmer, Dartmouth 3 5 2 12 Hahn, Pennsylvania 3 4 4 12 Owen, Yale 5 6 0 12 Busse, Princeton 1 5 1 11 Cerrone, Columbia 2 4 2 10 Romano, Harvard 1 3 4 10 Lenz, Pennsylvania 3 3 4 10 Soleliac, Pennsylvania 3 3 4 10 Winston, Princeton 1 5 0 10 Ingley, Yale...
...short while before the Freiheitsender cut loose, Radio Paris, which the Nazis permitted the French to operate, was suddenly suppressed. Reason: the broadcast of a comic opera by Reynaldo Hahn which had as its finale the lines: "After the day of storm comes the summer sun. It is love that will give us back our liberty." Fairly screamed into the mikes of Radio Paris by an enthusiastic chorus, the lines gave the Nazis a nasty turn...
...cover Germany's surprise attack on Norway two months ago, Wedel sent one company of his PK men: 50 correspondents, 100 technicians. In charge went young Korvetten Kapitän Hahn. Aboard the German cruiser Blücher, when Norwegian shore batteries sent her down in the narrow waters of Oslo Fjord, Captain Hahn took the only films of a naval engagement shot thus far in World War II. Forced to swim, he got ashore with his pictures intact, but ran into a squad of Norwegian soldiers and destroyed the films to keep them from being captured...
...Ross Hahn will be at the other guard spot with Rabbit Pearce at the other forward. Bernstein, Caput, and Schrieber are the Penn alternates...
Science popularizers like to point out with bated breath that there is enough atomic energy locked in a cupful of water to drive a big liner across the Atlantic. To hardheaded physicists, the idea of releasing and harnessing this energy was a wild dream. Then, early in 1939, Hahn and Strassmann of Germany, with help from France, Sweden and Denmark, used neutrons to break uranium atoms into two nearly equal fragments, with release of some 200,000,000 electron-volts of atomic energy per atom (TIME, Feb. 6; March 13). This was by far the most violent atomic explosion ever...