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Word: dougall (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Also at the hearing, FBI Agent James Dougal testified that Geer said Ronald Stafford had fondled the breast areas of one or both girls and had taken one of them into the woods for an hour...

Author: By Sewell Chan, | Title: Senior Helps FBI Nab Suspects In Michigan Kidnapping Case | 3/31/1997 | See Source »

...Dougal also testified that Ronald Stafford said his brother and Geer had pinched the girls in the buttocks and grabbed their legs...

Author: By Sewell Chan, | Title: Senior Helps FBI Nab Suspects In Michigan Kidnapping Case | 3/31/1997 | See Source »

...Dougal testified that Ronald Stafford told him the three men had planned the abduction for two weeks because they suspected abuse on the part of the girls' father. The father, Jesse Hainer, said he had known Stafford for more than a year but later told him to keep away from the girls...

Author: By Sewell Chan, | Title: Senior Helps FBI Nab Suspects In Michigan Kidnapping Case | 3/31/1997 | See Source »

Last week, as if to reinforce Dougal Dixon's point, a team led by Harvard Paleontologist Parish Jenkins Jr. announced a rare discovery from northeastern Arizona: a fossil jaw from a tiny, shrewlike, insect-eating mammal that lived during the early Jurassic period, 180 million years ago. At that time the first small mammals evolved from a kind of mammalian reptile. In evolutionary terms, these creatures bided their time, for 115 million years, until the disappearance of dinosaurs and other reptiles allowed them to evolve thousands of different shapes and sizes. Significantly, the Arizona find adds a third major...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: A Bygone Shrew | 9/28/1981 | See Source »

...British Science Writer Dougal Dixon. A student of both geology and paleontology, Dixon has taken a careful look at the question and come up with more serious predictions, based on genetics and the course of evolution to date. The creatures that populate Dixon's futurist world in After Man: A Zoology of the Future (St. Martin's Press; $14.95) are variously amusing or appalling. But they are perfectly logical...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: The Once and Future Zoo | 9/28/1981 | See Source »

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