Word: normalities
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...friendly grunts in his direction, Tito complacently answered: "Russia smiled on us, but they will not blind us with the smiles. I personally can never believe 100% in the Soviet Union." As the Russians slacked off their invective and talked of resuming relations, Tito told Western newsmen: "We want normal relations but, naturally, there need not be friendly relations...
...false home towns so I wouldn't have to go through a lot of stuff about coming from Japan," he recalls. Still, his interest in the Far East was strong, and he found it "only natural to think about graduate study. It was a very normal, drifting business--no great crises or decisions...
Before the flight, biologists removed the inner ear sensory system of one of the mice, left the other normal, and put each in a "compartment in a rotating smooth-walled drum with an irregularity that afforded a possible foothold for each." Cameras recorded the brief critical no-gravity point of the rocket flight: the desensitized mouse clung to his perch, "whereas the normal animal clawed at the air, suggesting disorientation." A subsequent experiment with monkeys "clearly established the fact that the weightless state itself produces no disturbance of circulation in terms of heart rate or arterial and venous blood pressures...
...modern twist, announced a new sextant that, once preset, will seek out the proper star or planet, average a series of sights, and flash its readings by remote control to the navigator. With a three-star fix, he can pinpoint the position of his aircraft within two miles under normal flight conditions. But the big advantage lies in the fact that he can do it without ever budging from his navigation charts. The system would be of invaluable help to fighter-bomber pilots on long-range missions. Also, airmen have long speculated that an automatic celestial navigator will ultimately guide...
...with normal growth, the U.S. requires 30,000 new engineers annually; the new production burdens of the cold war require another 10,000 a year. But last year accredited U.S. schools graduated only 19,650 engineers-less than half the required number. Lacking engineers, U.S. companies have begun refusing Government research projects. Caterpillar Tractor alone turned down six armed forces contracts...