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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "January_1931" retrieved in 0.001 sec with these stats:
- "januari" found 5856 times in 2965 documents
- "1931" found 1038 times in 473 documents
David Lasser publishes issue 6 of the Bulletin of the American Interplanetary Society . It features an announcement that Robert Esnault Pelterie will be coming to New York to speak at the American Museum of Natural History on January 28th. Articles include "Rocket Fuels" by William Lemkin, and "Ballistics of the Rocket" by Fletcher Pratt.
... .
During 1931-32: Taylor Cub Model A, a two-seat, high-wing light airplane, first produced, and helped popularize sports flying in the United States.
1931
January 1931 January
Jan 1 1931 1 Jan 2 1931 2 Jan 3 1931 3 Jan 4 1931 4 Jan 5 1931 5 Jan 6 1931 6 Jan 7 1931 7 Jan 8 1931 8 Jan 9 1931 9 Jan 10 1931 10 ...
... sick with a cold and could not deliver his address to the audience planned on January 14th at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. G. Edward Pendray delivered ... "The Construction of the Rocket Vehicle" was abstracted from a speech given by Fitch on January 16th.
Media:US1838984A.pdf U.S. Patent 1.838,984 for Rocket Motor Aeroplane issued to Louis Berkowitz of New York on Dec 29 1931 December 29, 1931 . Filed Mar 20 1931
Start of official rocket-mail service between two Austrian towns by Friedrich Schmiedl; test flights began in February 1931, while rocket-mall service continued until March 16, 1933.
''The Death Cloud'' a science fiction story by American Interplanetary Society founder Nathaniel Schachner and Arthur Zagat appears in Astounding Science Fiction magazine.
Science and Invention magazine features article on cometary impacts.
Image:SI 1931-05.jpg 300px
Robert Esnault-Pelterie is scheduled to appear at the American Museum of Natural History at the invitation of the American Interplanetary Society but cancels at the last minute. G. Edward Pendray delivers a talk to a full house in his place.
Image:AIS_Jan_27_1931_.jpg 200px
... total number of R&D scientists and engineers; January 1965 figure of 101,200 for these personnel showed decline of 7,700 from January 1964. Electrical equipment and communication industry accounted for 22% of total-74,800 scientists and engineers as of January 1965, 600 less than previous January. ‘‘(NSF, Reviews of Data on Science Resources, 1/66)’’
Dr. George P ... only the most established and influential researchers win out.” ‘‘(AGU Transactions, 1/66)’’
December 1965
January 1966 January
Jan 1 1966 1 Jan 2 1966 2 Jan 3 1966 3 Jan 4 ...
... setbacks in space that were not acknowledged by Soviet authorities. The magazine claimed that on January 29 the Soviets deliberately destroyed a Cosmos 1,813 military reconnaissance satellite they had launched on January 15, 1987. When the satellite malfunctioned upon reentry, its self-destruction system was activated to ... a day later. (C Trib, Feb 7/87; NY Times, Feb 7/87)
1987
January 1987 January
Jan 1 1987 1 Jan 2 1987 2 Jan 3 1987 3 Jan 4 1987 ...
... 's Dazzling Realm” article appears in National Geographic Magazine
The Washington Post reported the death January 13 of James J. Donegan, 63, "a pioneer in space technology" at NASA since 1958 ... Mercury control." Powers, who retired from NASA in 1964, was found dead of natural causes January 1 at his home in Phoenix, Ariz. (Av Wk, Jan 7/80, 21)
FBIS reported ... "many novel technical features." (FBIS, Moscow Wrld Svc in Russian, Jan 8/80)
1980
January 1980 January
Jan 1 1980 1 Jan 2 1980 2 Jan 3 1980 3 Jan 4 1980 ...
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