Word: pipes
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...Town" was never much on the theatre. The nearest it got to the arts was choir singing. But the New England Repertory production of Willer's play brings one very close to Grover's Corners, N. H. The pipe-smoking stage manager seems to have found his old haunts under the sagging roof beams of the Joy Street Playhouse. Even the milkman who bustles across the stage seems to be making his rounds for the umpteenth time...
...ships, piping takes up much valuable space. When silver brazing alloy is used instead of threaded joints, the thickness of the pipe can be reduced about one-half. It can be installed more quickly...
...wave came over, bomb fragments wounded a pilot and two mechanics in a trench flanking the runway. An A.V.G. doctor lugged the pilot to a jeep and drove it across the field to a hospital, with Jap bullets chasing him in the dust like puffs from his own exhaust pipe. One of the mechanics died. In an ambulance plane the pilot and the other mechanic were carried over the mountains to Calcutta...
...field glasses, saw the Italian fleet on the horizon. Said he to the Chicago Daily News's Richard Mowrer: "Well, it's been nice knowing you." Mowrer's throat was too dry for reply; he nodded, and admired a British captain calmly ramming tobacco into his pipe...
...Cooler. Hot oil from airplane crankcases is usually forced into air-bathed tubes for cooling. But at high altitudes this system works too well. Air is often so cold that oil closest to the pipe surfaces freezes and insulates the circulating unfrozen oil against the cooling blast. So, to keep the system from breaking down, oil is usually bypassed around the cooler and therefore lubricates at temperatures too high for efficiency. Airesearch has developed a cooler that works in high-altitude cold. It regulates the flow of cooling air through shutters, which are narrowed when the oil becomes too cold...