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Word: hangar (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Institute has an $1,800 triangular quartz prism for studying the effect on plants of various wavelengths of light. Another equipment item is a huge, mobile frame, shaped like a dirigible hangar carrying powerful lights in the roof. It can be wheeled over a greenhouse to observe plant behavior under continuous 24-hour illumination. It has been learned that barley, cabbage and clover subjected to such treatment keep on growing 24 hours a day but that tomato plants quit, light or no light, and rest five to seven hours...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Plantarium | 4/29/1935 | See Source »

...ordered by the Navy, took a year to build, is considered by Douglas its major engineering achievement. So big that a pit had to be dug in the factory to accommodate its hull, the ship was also too big to be assembled in the company's hangar which is large enough to hold several Douglas transports. XP3D-1 has two 830-h.p. Twin Wasp motors, 100-ft. wingspread, carries eight men, six machine guns, two tons of bombs. Although not armored. XP3D-1 tickled Navy officials, impressed them especially by carrying a 2,000-lb. payload on one engine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TRANSPORT: California Secret | 3/25/1935 | See Source »

Last week the Navy's sole surviving dirigible was walked out of her Lakehurst hangar, moored securely to her mobile mast.* Her tail was buckled to a flatcar mounted on a huge circular track, left there to swing with the wind. Decommissioned nearly three years ago, partly dismantled and condemned as unfit for further avigation, the 11-year-old Los Angeles had bein reconditioned not to fly but to determine how she might weather a year's uninterrupted exposure to the elements...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Transport: Favor | 3/25/1935 | See Source »

Three days after she was moored outside, a 42-knot wind picked up the Los Angeles' stern, wrenched off part of the flatcar, left it dangling 30 ft. high, ripped up rails like so much spaghetti. Trundled back into her hangar by an emergency ground crew, the old "L. A." was found to be suffering from a dented gondola, broken struts, torn fabric. Newshawks found Lieut.-Commander Charles Emery Rosendahl far from sad. "The wind did the Navy a favor," he explained. "This is one of the very things we are studying. . . . The L. A. can take...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Transport: Favor | 3/25/1935 | See Source »

Coach Fesler will start an entirely new combination against the weak M.I.T. five this evening at the Tech Hangar in an effort to find a team that can produce play of League calibre. Avowedly an experimental lineup, the new quintet contains only one man, Dick Fletcher, who started against B. U. on Wednesday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FESLER'S TEAM TO FACE M.I.T. CAGERS TONIGHT | 12/8/1934 | See Source »

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