Word: suspectible
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Astronomers suspect that the ionosphere itself may be a radio transmitter, and University astronomers hope to confirm this. They are also trying to find out how radio noise from the earth and its ionosphere fluctuates between day and night, and from latitude to latitude, and how such phenomena as sun-spot activity and solar flares influence its intensity...
Radio waves from earth usually bounce off the ionosphere and return to the ground, but astronomers suspect that the ionosphere has "holes" through which some radio waves can pass. The University group is investigating the homogeneity of the ionosphere by aiming radio pulses of various wavelengths from a transmitter at the Harvard College Observatory to the satellites as they pass over Cambridge. The information received by the radio telescopes is then relayed on command to a receiver at the Air Force Base in New Boston...
...Rocky suspect that Kennedy, in his considerable correspondence with Khrushchev, had made some sort of deal? "Well, I have no idea," replied Rocky. "I only said that because it is hard to see what other reason there would be, in view of our past policy, and it seems to me this is a very sharp change of policy concerning which the public has not been advised...
Freed Slaves. Many observers suspect that this new ship of state may go swiftly on the rocks, but few of them are in the Arab world. Twelve members of oil-rich Kuwait's 50-man legislature formally requested unity with the U.A.R. Even Nasser's traditional enemies, the monarchies of Jordan and Saudi Arabia, made efforts at reconciliation. Jordan's King Hussein discreetly let 56 Nasserite and Baathist political prisoners out of jail and sent off friendly feelers to Nasser. In Saudi Arabia, alarmed by a pro-Nasser demonstration that cost 19 lives, Premier Prince Feisal tried...
...support of the central cast never waned. Lady Sangazure (Susan Bly), Sir Marmaduke (Lucian Russell), the Counsel (Philip Hartman), the Page (Jeffrey Cobb), and the chorus all added fine moments to the show. But here I suspect much of the genius - and there are bits of action that are genius - rests largely with the stage director, David Mills. If he is responsible for the choreography of the chorus, he deserves congratulations; if he created the gestures, the Victorian self-mockery, the hands that reach out of the curtain so that things conveniently disappear, he merits...