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Examples
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Szczepanik says that runners with lower counts, say, around 80, tend to get more injuries because theyre in the air longer, overstriding, and strike the ground harder with each stride.
Young Runners Marc Bloom 2009
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Using studies by the noted coach and exercise physiologist Jack Daniels, Hilton coach Mike Szczepanik looks for a count of at least 90 strides per minute counting one leg.
Young Runners Marc Bloom 2009
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The interview apparently went well; Mark Twain proposed to the emperor a plan to eliminate the human race by withdrawing the oxygen from the air for a couple of minutes, and said he thought that Jan Szczepanik could handle the details.
Mark Twain Ron Powers 2005
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In this case, though, the inventor, a young Pole named Jan Szczepanik, was no ineffectual dreamer.
Mark Twain Ron Powers 2005
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The interview apparently went well; Mark Twain proposed to the emperor a plan to eliminate the human race by withdrawing the oxygen from the air for a couple of minutes, and said he thought that Jan Szczepanik could handle the details.
Mark Twain Ron Powers 2005
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In this case, though, the inventor, a young Pole named Jan Szczepanik, was no ineffectual dreamer.
Mark Twain Ron Powers 2005
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Clemens would have invested heavily in this, too, for he had implicit faith in its future, but the ‘Fernseher’ was already controlled for the Paris Exposition; so he could only employ Szczepanik as literary material, which he did in two instances: “The Austrian Edison Keeping School Again” and “From the London Times of 1904” — magazine articles published in the Century later in the year.
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Austrian inventor, Szczepanik, and his business manager for the
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Within a month after his debts were paid he was negotiating with the Austrian inventor Szczepanik for the American rights in a wonderful carpet-pattern machine, and, Sellers - like, was planning to organize a company with a capital of fifteen hundred million dollars to control the carpet-weaving industries of the world.
The Boys' Life of Mark Twain Paine, Albert Bigelow, 1861-1937 1916
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Szczepanik had invented the 'Fernseher', or Telelectroscope, the machine by which one sees at a distance.
Mark Twain, a Biography — Volume II, Part 2: 1886-1900 Albert Bigelow Paine 1899
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