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Science News March 15, 2003 |
TimeLine: March 11, 1933 Great lion of La Brea... Lightest water made, and new record for heaviest set... Optician's window novelty measures heat from stars  |
Science News August 23, 2003 |
TimeLine: August 19, 1933 Construction begun on 80-inch Texas telescope... Spot larger than earth breaks out on Saturn... Artificial blood in dogs shows red cells guard hemoglobin  |
Science News April 21, 2007 |
Timeline: From the April 17, 1937, Issue Water and Woods Form an Ideal Photograph Subject... More Elements Discovered in Cold of Interstellar Space... May Yet Tap Atom's Energy, Yale Scientists Declares...  |
Science News March 5, 2005 |
From the March 2, 1935, Issue Telescope Site Has 300 Clear Nights a Year... Gland Therapy Treats Heart Disease Successfully... New Coldest Cold Reached in Leyden Laboratory...  |
Science News July 26, 2003 |
TimeLine: July 22, 1933 Perkins Observatory 69-inch mirror is third largest... Find eggs that were fresh a million years ago... Cancer susceptibility depends on single gene  |
Science News July 5, 2003 |
From the July 1, 1933, issue Seven mummies from Texas cave brought to Smithsonian... Successes in atom smashing evaluated by Dr. Millikan... Atomic bombardment breaks up more elements  |
Science News June 18, 2005 |
From the June 15, 1935, Issue Dunlap Observatory Dedicated on Director's 70th Birthday... Einstein's Equivalence Law is Again Proved Correct... Epilepsy in Mice May Give Light on Human Disease...  |
Science News January 31, 2004 |
TimeLine: January 27, 1934 Flash-over at 125,000 volts... 200-inch telescope mirror to be poured of special glass... Heavy hydrogen-lithium bombardment yields helium  |
Science News September 23, 2006 |
Timeline: From the September 19, 1936, Issue Largest Gaseous Nebula "Found" by New Telescope... Ounce of Oil Covers Eight Acres of Surface... Cancer Explained as Uncontrolled Cell Growth...  |
Popular Mechanics January 23, 2009 Andrew Moseman |
The 5 Most Powerful Telescopes, and 5 That Will Define the Future of Astronomy Today's best telescopes are astounding feats -- and astronomers are improving them constantly.  |