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R-3 The Egg of the Phoenix was written by Frank Mentzer, with art by Bob Walters, and published by TSR/RPGA in 1982 as a 16-page booklet with an outer folder. [1] The module was a limited edition, and was only available for purchase to RPGA members. [1]
Page:Project Blue Book, complete status reports.pdf/1 Page:Project Blue Book, complete status reports.pdf/24 Wikisource:Community collaboration/Monthly Challenge/August 2024
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Planes built from metal use similar techniques to more conventional factory-built aircraft. They can be more challenging to build, requiring metal-cutting, metal-shaping, and riveting if building from plans. "Quick-build" kits are available which have the cutting, shaping, and hole-drilling mostly done, requiring only finishing and assembly.
A 'collapsing compass' would appear to be a less powerful instrument. However, by the compass equivalence theorem in Proposition 2 of Book 1 of Euclid's Elements, no power is lost by using a collapsing compass. Although the proposition is correct, its proofs have a long and checkered history. [1]
The FM77AV was a Japanese home computer released by Fujitsu in 1985, as an upgraded version of their earlier FM-7 platform - and FM77AV games started to be made available through Project EGG on November 24, 2001. There have been 12 FM77AV titles available on Project EGG, 1 of which is no longer available for purchase:
[1] Ruppelt was the director of Project Grudge in 1949 and then Project Blue Book in March 1952; he remained with Blue Book until late 1953. UFO researcher Jerome Clark writes, "Most observers of Blue Book agree that the Ruppelt years comprised the project's golden age, when investigations were most capably directed and conducted. Ruppelt was ...
The book is on the use of crochet to make physical surfaces with the geometry of the hyperbolic plane. The full hyperbolic plane cannot be embedded smoothly into three-dimensional space, but pieces of it can. Past researchers had made models of these surfaces out of paper, but Taimiņa's work is the first work to do so using textile arts. [1]