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Recent British technical progress in aeronautics part Three—Space Activities

S.R. Dauncey B.A., A.F.B.I.S. (Astronautics Group, Hawker Siddclcy Aviation Ltd., Welkin House, Charterhouse Square, London, E.C.I.)
A.G. Holmes‐Siedle B.A., Ph.D., F.B.I.S. (Astronautics Group, Hawker Siddclcy Aviation Ltd., Welkin House, Charterhouse Square, London, E.C.I.)

Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology

ISSN: 0002-2667

Article publication date: 1 September 1961

26

Abstract

SPACE' in Britain over the past year could well be likened to a half‐finished crossword puzzle. It is clear that the empty spaces must at some time be filled (possibly with black squares!) but the clues are so devious that each answer awaits letters from other words; anagrams and conundrums abound and, what is more, there is no dictionary in which to look up the words. One might even say that half the clues have not been given. Like a crossword, the parts of the whole are tenuously connected and every clue has several possible meanings.

Citation

Dauncey, S.R. and Holmes‐Siedle, A.G. (1961), "Recent British technical progress in aeronautics part Three—Space Activities", Aircraft Engineering and Aerospace Technology, Vol. 33 No. 9, pp. 262-265. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb033452

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1961, MCB UP Limited

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