. Annual report for the year ended June 30 .... United States National Museum. 38 NATIONAL MUSEUM ANNUAL REPORT, 1963 World War II, a 1922 cine-camera, Model-A, their first motion picture camera, and several cutaway cameras illustrative of design changes. Dr. Harold E. Edgerton donated a pair of deep-sea stereo cameras of his design. These were first used in 195i by Captain Jaques Yves Cousteau and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. President John F. Kennedy, through the Atomic Energy Commission, transferred a cube of uranium fuel used by Enrico Fermi in the world's first cont


. Annual report for the year ended June 30 .... United States National Museum. 38 NATIONAL MUSEUM ANNUAL REPORT, 1963 World War II, a 1922 cine-camera, Model-A, their first motion picture camera, and several cutaway cameras illustrative of design changes. Dr. Harold E. Edgerton donated a pair of deep-sea stereo cameras of his design. These were first used in 195i by Captain Jaques Yves Cousteau and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. President John F. Kennedy, through the Atomic Energy Commission, transferred a cube of uranium fuel used by Enrico Fermi in the world's first controlled neutron chain reaction (December 2, 1942). Other noteworthy donations to the division of manufactur- ing and heavy industries include a collection of tinware of more than 300 items, covering the whole range of the 19th-century tinsmith's art, from Kenneth Jewett. From the Army Nuclear Power Program was obtained a model of the first land-based nuclear power plant (SM-1), the prototype of small reactors being developed for the use of the Army in the field, while the Oak Ridge National Labora- tory provided a display showing the method of fabrication of the fuel elements used therein. The section of iron and steel was suc-. Hoechst tureen, gift of Dr. Hans Syz. The cover, with a putto knop. Is decorated on a white ground with the "Gotzowsky" relief pattern "erhabene Blumen" and with boquets of flowers in multicolour. The rim is decorated with a gilt pattern. Modeled by L. Russinger, its height is 1072 Inches and length 13 Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original United States National Museum. [Washington] : Smithsonian Institution


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