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...party whose triumph Boss Farley was celebrating was not the party of 1924 nor the party of 1932. It was both and something more. Two years ago Mr. Farley took command of what John Jacob Raskob with lots of money and the brains of Jouett Shouse and Pressagent Charles Michelson, had built up from the wreck of 1928. Since then Democracy's leader in the White House had become a national hero. While still retaining the conservative South, the Party captivated North and West with a new brand of social reform and economic experiment. But, more important from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PARTIES: Democratic Sunshine | 11/19/1934 | See Source »

Using methods patterned after the famous experiments of Foucault and Michelson, N. Henry Black '96, assistant professor of Physics, has been determining the speed of light by means of apparatus constructed under his direction in the Physics department. Professor Black pointed out that, in spite of its enormous size, the speed of light is known with greater accuracy than almost any other physical constant and that it is important in the study of many other types of radiation besides optics...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Black Reproduces Foucault-Michelson Experiment in Determination of Speed of Light | 4/28/1934 | See Source »

Science in industry was defended by Dr. Jewett, onetime associate of the late great Albert Abraham Michelson. To buttress his defense he had declared that when American Telephone & Telegraph (of which he is a vice president) installed dial telephones, no girls were thrown out of work...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Job-Maker | 3/5/1934 | See Source »

...light always travels at the same speed through a vacuum. Last week from a sunny California valley came shocking news that "that most fundamental constant" is apparently a variable. Nineteenth Century theorists supposed that light was propagated through space by an all-pervading ether. The late great Albert Abraham Michelson, first U. S. Nobel Prizewinner in Science, reasoned that if this ether existed, then the motion of the earth through it should affect the velocity of light. In 1887 he and Edward W. Morley rigged up an interferometer, raced two beams of light against each other, one parallel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Inconstant Constant? | 12/25/1933 | See Source »

...prodigy of versatility and popularity was the late Fenton Benedict Turck-doctor, scientist, esthete. The variety among his close friends mirrored the variety of his interests-Railroader Leonor Fresnel Loree (see p. 45), Anthropologist Sir Arthur Keith, Physicist Albert Abraham Michelson, Sculptor Lorado Taft, Entomologist Leland Ossian Howard, Politician Sir Robert Laird Borden, Immunologist Theobald Smith. As doctor he was an internist, with digestive disorders his specialty. Last week, at the behest of Manhattan's August Holland Society, friends of the late Fenton Benedict Turck gathered to honor the posthumous publication of a book by him-Action...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Turck's Cytost | 2/6/1933 | See Source »

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