Word: spun
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...that the American South is a monolith. It had all begun by 1861, the story goes. Since the firing on Fort Sumter, the secession of 11 states and the formation of the Confederacy, Southern men and women have worshipped different heroes, anchored their beginnings to different battles and spun their folklore around a different war for independence. Their history began not in the spirit of 1976, but in the intransigence of the 1860s; not in Massachusetts Bay, but deep in the Delta of Mississippi or the Piedmont of South Carolina; not in the cradle of liberty, but in the curse...
...pickup truck traveling on an Alabama highway at high speed went round a curve, spun out of control, and turned over into a ditch. The driver, Kenneth R. Barton, lay helpless, bleeding from an artery. State Trooper Kenyon M. Lassiter happened by in his patrol car and quickly applied a tourniquet. He eventually got Barton safely to a hospital, and was credited with saving his life...
...generator powered by the heavy flywheel, which would be kept spinning by its own inertia. Electricity from the generator would then turn a conventional drive motor attached to the rear wheels. Electrogyros could not travel more than three-quarters of a mile before the flywheel had to be spun up again, and eventually they were abandoned as impractical...
...flywheel can be kept rotating longer if its weight or its initial rate of spin-or both-is increased. Trouble is, top speed is limited by the strength of the flywheel's material. Had the Electrogyro's wheel been spun much faster centrifugal force would have ripped it apart. In the vehicles being equipped by Lockheed for San Francisco, the flywheels will be revved up to 12,000 r.p.m.-fast enough to drive a fully loaded trolleybus (80 passengers) for six miles. To keep such fast-moving machinery in one piece, say Lockheed engineers, they will...
Good Times. CBS. Friday, 8:30-9 p.m. E.D.T. Already renewed for next season, this is yet another "relevant" sitcom spun off the earlier creations of Tandem Productions (All in the Family, Sanford and Son, Maude). Indeed, Florida (Esther Rolle) used to be Maude's maid. Now relocated in a Chicago housing project, she is seen as the matriarch of a black family that talks Burbank jive and is short of money. But in composition, attitudes and ambitions, the household is indistinguishable from the white families that heretofore have had exclusive domain in this TV neighborhood. There...