Word: rayed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...loss of James saw the shift of Ray Jones, former J. V. star and a Varsity wingback so far this year, to the tailback post. Jones will thus have the play-calling assignment under Frank Foley and Austie Harding...
...available on Soldiers Field during the fall season to take care of and prevent any injuries. These are chief surgeon Thorndike, five assistant surgeons, and six men qualified as masseurs. In the latter group there are two male nurses who are trained physic-therapists and several X-ray technicians, all under the supervision of trainer Jimmy Cox. This equipment is for minor and intramural sports as well as for the Varsity...
Justin J. Radin '40, Wains T. Ray '39, Norman J. Richards '40, Elliot L. Richardson '41, Samuel B. Richmond '40, James M. Robertson Jr. '39, Fred Rogoesin '39, Isadore N. Rosenberg '40, Sidney Rsenberg '40, Sidney D. Ross '39, Leon N. Satenstein '39, Abraham Schneider '41, Charles J. Shagoury '40, Ely A. Shamieh '41, Harold S. Shapero '41, Bernard D. Shea '41, Harry M. Shooshan Jr. '39, William Siegel '39, Francis E. Silva Jr. '41, Richard V. Smith '41, Irving H. Soden '39, Samuel Soll '40, Leon D. Starr '40, paul K. Stumpt '41, Charles G. Swain...
...past four months physicists of the National Bureau of Standards at Washington have been sending clusters of small sounding balloons to great heights in the upper air. Purpose: cosmic ray research. The balloons carry Geiger-Müller cosmic ray counters, barographs, automatic radios which send signals to a ground station every 15 seconds, recording the altitude (in terms of air pressure) and the intensity of the cosmic bombardment. Last week Drs. L. F. Curtiss and A. V. Astin reported that one cluster of six balloons had reached the remarkable height of 23 miles (about 120,000 ft.). This...
...Curtiss and Astin found that cosmic rays were thickest twelve miles up, where the intensity is 200 times that at sea level. This agrees closely with the findings of Caltech's famed Robert Andrews Millikan. who sent balloons to 92,000 ft., recorded a cosmic-ray peak...