Word: detectible
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...conduct in the past two months, especially in the Middle East. Moscow not only advanced its missiles in Egypt, but even after all of the fuss that created, it is still strengthening Nasser's air defenses in violation of the agreement, knowing full well that U.S. and Israeli intelligence detect every move. "This is deliberate?it is not clandestine," observes one Soviet expert in the U.S. Kremlin strategy raises all the old doubts about Moscow's intentions of abiding by any pact it enters...
...radioisotopes-forms of normally stable elements made radioactive in atom smashers. Radioisotopes have already become helpful in irradiating and arresting cancer. Lately, researchers have achieved even more significant results in cancer diagnosis. Because radioisotopes tend to concentrate in certain organs or diseased tissues, physicians have been able to detect tumors as much as six months before they appear on conventional X rays. Result: an important head start in the treatment of those that are malignant...
...abundance, and on France, where gangsters in "laboratories" around Marseille refine crude morphine into heroin, which is then smuggled into the U.S. The U.S., for example, has given Mexico $1,000,000 for the purchase of five helicopters, three light aircraft and other equipment to be used specifically to detect and catch violators. Dogs have been trained to sniff out marijuana. Since last October, the Mexican army has sought out and destroyed a total of 1,450 acres of poppy fields, and Mexican police have arrested 539 persons on drug-trafficking charges...
...Geological Survey's lab at Menlo Park, a fired-up corps of young scientists is "bugging" central California's creaking faults with ultrasensitive new instruments. The lab has already set up more than 100 seismic stations, one-eighth of the world's total, to detect ever smaller earth tremors...
...rapid spread of the blight caught the Government by surprise, partly because federal crop checkers found it hard to detect: healthy-looking stalks and leaves often concealed young ears that were rotting. As late as Aug. 4, federal crop forecasters were predicting a 1970 crop of 4.7 billion bushels, up 3% from last year. Last week Agriculture Department experts unofficially lowered that estimate by 10%, but plant pathologists elsewhere fear that the crop loss may run higher. Preliminary field reports indicated that 30% to 40% losses are likely in the Southeast, and that the yield in Illinois...