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HENRY LIVINGSTON HEYL...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Nov. 17, 1930 | 11/17/1930 | See Source »

...Palmer Floors 3 and 4 W. S. Patter 59 Plympton St., C. S. Petrasch, Jr. GORE A Entry D. Booth--A-11 B Entry W. S. Youngman--B-12 C Entry G. Kunashevsky, Jr. C-21 D Entry K. L. Myers, Jr.--D-11 E Entry W. M. Heyl--E-43 STANDISH A Entry B. B. Wygant, Jr.--A-11 B Entry T. Ordway, Jr.--B-12 C Entry R. S. Neff--C-23 D Entry C. K. Seyfert--D-41 E Entry L. Williams--E41 GEORGE SMITH A Entry D. P. Dutton--A-11 B Entry N. Werthessen...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Phillips Brooks House Announces List of Collectors for Annual Drive for Textbooks--Collections Made June 7 | 5/29/1930 | See Source »

John Heard Jr. '33, H. R. Berrmann '33, W. McM. Heyl '33, J. L. Hutter Jr. '33, J. E. Larkin '32, A. L. Lowe '30, Peyton Murray '32, F. W. Nee '30, A. H. Parker '32, G. R. Ray '32, F. B. Rice '31, H. N. Roberts '30, John Russell '33, F. W. Stetson '31, DeWitt Stetten '30, Robert Tangeman '32, Meyer Texon '30, Charles Watson '30, E. E. Wendell '32, and Cyrus Wood...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: INSTRUMENTAL CLUBS ELECT NEW MEMBERS | 3/18/1930 | See Source »

...Jeans was not the only astronomer who, last week, was engaged in somewhat mundane speculations. Dr. Paul Renno Heyl, a physicist attached to the U. S. Bureau of Standards, began his second series of experiments to determine the world's weight. Last year he estimated this to be 6,592,000,000,000,000,000,000 tons. Now, by making a slight change in his apparatus,* Astronomer Heyl expects to achieve a slight but consequential difference in his result...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Of the Earth | 3/19/1928 | See Source »

...trot in the charity ball room; in the diplomatic ballroom an orchestra of strings played a waltz. There was no confusion. The diplomats did not hear a single ribald chuckle of jazz; the charity strutters were not bored by the supplications of fiddle strings. Reporters asked Dr. Heyl questions. Said he: "The partition is made of hair felt, supported by thin boards of sugar-cane fibre, and the musical sounds become tangled and lost in this wilderness of hair and fibre. Hair, fibre and similar pliable substances, we have found, enmesh and deaden sound which would vibrate through the strongest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Soundless | 12/28/1925 | See Source »

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