Word: storer
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Locke, Murray Sanford of 31 Seekell Street, Providence, R. I.; Classical High, Providence. Lovett, John Richard Patrick of 96 Sayles Avenue, Pascoag, R. I.; Burrillville High, Harrisville, R. I. McFee. Arthur Storer of 93 Pine Street, Portland, Me.; Deering High, Portland. McMurtrie, Richard Lempereur of Bellevue Place, Gorham, N. H.; Mt. Hermon School, Mt. Hermon, Mass. Mello, Robert Charles of 32-43 32nd Street, Long Island City, N. Y.; Phillips Exter Academy, Exeter, N. H. Nebel, Harry Thomas of 129 Jamaica Avenue, West View, Pa.; Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass...
...Storer Baldwin '21 of Boston was reelected treasurer, and Peter E. Pratt '40 of Charles River, director of the Alumni Records, was elected secretary...
...logarithm they have come close, independently, to the mechanisms that keep the bird on the wing. The masters of machines that can outfly any bird for speed or distance must admit that a bird is, in a structural sense, a small and amazingly efficient living airplane. John H. Storer explains all this in a new book, The Flight of Birds (Cranbrook Institute of Science...
With a series of slow-motion pictures, Storer proves that birds use all the aerodynamic tricks that man builds into his airplanes-and a few more besides. A bird's "propellers," explains Storer, are the big feathers at the ends of its wings. They are perfect airfoils with thick leading edges and thin trailing edges. When the bird flaps its wings downward, the "prop feathers" separate, twist to assume the proper "angle of attack," and act like propeller blades. They generate a forward force that pulls the wing forward, and the bird with...
Henry C. Clark '11 and G. Storer Baldwin '21 were reelected secretary and treasurer of the Association...