Word: heatedly
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Mopelia" is the famous "sea devil's" most highly-prized possession. Although modeled after the sailing ships of former years which made New England famous, she has thoroughly modern equipment and accommodation throughout, including refrigeration and steam-heat...
...Medal, 1928, by Royal Geographical Society, for work in Polar regions, culminating in (1928) flight from Point Barrow to Spitsbergen; awarded gold medals by American, Belgian, Danish, Cuban Geographical Societies (the Cuban society last week gave a medal to Georges Claude, French scientist who experimentally generates electricity from the heat differences between the surface and bottom waters of Matanzas Bay); silver medals by German Geographical Society and City of Berlin; gold medal by Norwegian and French Aeronautical Societies and Inter- national League of Aviators...
Little is known of cosmic rays. But of other rays a progressive series of effects on living matter may be observed. Heat, for example-and Dr. Heyroth pursued his thesis* with mounting excitement- sears the flesh immediately. X-rays cause a burn which becomes evident three weeks to six months after. Gamma-ray burns do not show for years. "So the cosmic rays, we believe, must take infinitely longer still. Of what investigation we have made of these rays, we venture what seems to be a wholly new theory as to why- exempting not even the strongest and most sheltered...
...Buenos Aires, where a cordial population welcomed them with cheers, Edward of Wales and Prince George made the best of horrible heat. At the famed Palero Racetrack, 844 pesos ($358) was won by the two Princes. At a girl who cried from the crowd "Give me a kiss!" Prince George waved his hand...
Already famed for a mile he ran recently in 4:13, Carl Coan's 4:17 mile in this race was enough to put him 20 yd. ahead at the wire. Another Pennsylvanian, Bill Carr, ran a dead heat with Johnny Lewis of Detroit City College in the 300-yd. race and won the runoff. In the 1,000-yd., Ray Conger had to beat George Bullwinkle, intercollegiate one-mile outdoor champion, and wise fans said he could not do it. They knew how Bullwinkle-a pacemaker as well as a finisher-liked to beat a finisher like Conger...