Word: decayed
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...State is not an absolute or absolutist State!" he cried. "Our State is organized, human, attached to the realities of life" through the representation of Italian employes and employers in the National Council of Corporations. "The decay of (laissez faire) Capitalism coincides with the decay of Socialism. The Socialist parties of Europe are in fragments...
...absorbed in air ten to 25 times more rapidly than had been previously calcu lated, and that absorption is fastest in dry air, a familiar fact to those who know how well sound carries on a foggy day. Since then Dr. Knudsen has not ceased to experiment with the "decay" of sound under various conditions. To the same Journal he has now reported new findings...
...sound whose decay Dr. Knudsen studies is a pure tone produced electrically and fed through a loudspeaker into a reverberation chamber filled with gas. Some of the sound is absorbed by the walls instead of by the gas, but this is calculated and discounted. The sound is picked up by a microphone, amplified, converted into electric current which causes a bulb to glow. If the sound has decayed beyond a certain level the current produced is insufficient to light the bulb. The time is measured between the cessation of tone production and the point in decay at which there...
...that a large part of the absorption in air is due to collisions between oxygen molecules and water vapor molecules. Dr. Knudsen's experiments with air and its two major components, oxygen and nitrogen, weigh heavily in favor of this suggestion. There was no appreciable difference in the decay rates in moist nitrogen and dry nitrogen. But the decay rate in moist air was only one-fifth the rate in moist oxygen, and oxygen is one-fifth...
...that epoch preceding and overlapping the Roosevelt regime, the eyes of a million Americans would have been straining impatiently for the week's issue of McClure's or Munsey's to soak up eagerly the revelations of Lincoln Steffens on this latest evidence of the decay of the 'System,' as he had named it. Following his hurried, jumpy, journalistic style through its thorough-going exploration of the intricacies and brazen sin of municipal graft. Steffens's audience would read avidly to the last word, throw up its hands in horror at the wickedness of the Big City, make...