Word: liquidizer
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...Martin's-in-the-Fields on their way to shelters before a raid because Murrow laid his mike down on the sidewalk to pick up their unhurried footsteps. U.S. listeners sensed the strange silence between two raids on moonlit London because Murrow told them how loudly the liquid from two pierced cans of peaches dripped inside a smashed shop...
...plea relates to the procurement of blood from citizens in order that we may store up for the Army and Navy processed blood in the form of dried plasma, i.e. the liquid part of blood after the cells are removed. This material can be redissolved in distilled water for use after injury in place of transfusions and of course is much more easily transportable. The Surgeons General have requested that " a large quantity of blood plasma be place and maintained in refrigerated storage where it will be available not only for military emergency but also for civilian catastrophies." The National...
Observers had reported that the air-cooled aircraft engines in U.S. tanks were less vulnerable than the liquid-cooled European engines. And they needed no stops for the water that in Libya is as precious as gold...
...figured out at 397 m.p.h. In service ceiling it had 170%, which would put it higher than most pilots could ever fly it. With such a ceiling, the P-40F can fight handily at around 25,000 feet. For its newest fighter Curtiss-Wright changed engines, from the liquid-cooled, U.S.-designed Allison (now 1,150 h.p.) to liquid-cooled, British-designed Rolls-Royce Merlin (1,300 h.p.), manufactured by Packard...
...theory of the nature of that framework. When molten glass is allowed to cool slowly enough to crystallize, it loses its transparency. Cooled more rapidly, it remains clear. So science has assumed that it is amorphous, a patternless collection of molecules, constituting a sort of stiffened liquid. In fact the classic definition of glass is "a liquid whose rigidity is great enough to enable it to be put to certain useful purposes." Dr. Pincus believes that the structure of glass is neither amorphous nor crystalline but somewhere between, with its atoms symmetrically arranged in patterns...