Word: rays
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Fogg Small Rm. 51 Mon. at 10 Germanic Mus. 8b Tues. at 2-4 Fogg Small Rm. 10b* ** Mon. at 2 Robinson Hall 13b* Mon. at 9 Van Rensselaer Rm. 15b* Tues. at 9 Fogg Laboratory 15e* Mon. at 10 Fogg Large Rm. 15n* Mon. at 2 Fogg X-ray Rm. 15o* Tues. at 11 Fogg Mus. 17* Consult Mr. Warner FRENCH 1* ** Consult Mr. Lincoln 2* ** Consult Dr. Webster 5 Mon. at 2 Sever 19 6* ** Consult Professor Morize 11 Tues. at 2 Sever 25 14* Consult Professor Hawkins 25* Tues. at 3 Sever 18 GEOGRAPHY...
Into the First Baptist Church at Easton, Maryland, on December 3rd, 1933 crowded 306 people or more for the final service of Rev. Ray Lakin's two week evangelistic campaign...
...alleged victims. First was Lord Carnarvon, sponsor of the expedition to Luxor. Shortly after the inner tomb was opened he was bitten by a mosquito, scratched the bite, died of infection. A Canadian university professor visited the tomb, died of sunstroke the next day. Two Roentgenologists, summoned to x-ray the mummy, died before they reached Egypt. Lord Carnarvon's halfbrother, the Hon. Mervyn Herbert, one of the first to enter the inner tomb, died, as did the Hon. Richard Westbury, wrote "I can't stand any more horrors," jumped to his death from a window. During...
Weatherman Willis Ray Gregg, born 54 years ago in Phoenix, N. Y. graduated from Cornell in 1903, joined the Weather Bureau next year. He was summoned to Washington headquarters in 1915, made chief of the Aerological Division two years later. Eight years ago he tackled the job of organizing the Bureau's service for commercial airways, has been at it ever since. He makes his debut as Bureau chief this week at the Aeronautical Sciences Institute Convention in Manhattan...
...centre of the domed room Banker Hayden beheld a great dumbbell-shaped Zeiss projection instrument like a Martian death-ray machine straight out of an early Wells novel. A packed audience of moppets and grownups murmured as 2,700 stars winked in their proper places on the dim vault overhead, as the planets glowed, as the Milky Way streamed in soft splendor. A lecturer identified stars and constellations with a flashlight beam. As the projector moved on its complex nest of gears, aeons of astronomical time flashed by. Realizing that this was no idle frivolity but a magnificent glimpse...