Word: mackli
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...antenna,” he said, making a valiant, if ultimately unsuccessful, effort to suppress his contempt. “The bars measure your reception.” I called my brother at breakfast to ask about the proper usage of “to mack on.” (“What? I’m awake because you called me.… Oh—I think it’s ‘macking with.’ Like, ‘I was macking with that girl at the party...
...True Believer Harvard psychiatrist John Mack, best known for his studies of people who claim to have had alien encounters, died last month after being hit by a drunk driver [MILESTONES, Oct. 11]. TIME interviewed Mack in 1994 as his book Abduction was stirring scientific skepticism [April...
...Mack says he expected the disbelief that has greeted the bizarre tales recounted in his book. 'This isn't supposed to be,' he explained to TIME. 'You aren't supposed to have little guys with big black eyes taking men, women and children against their wills on beams of light through walls and windows into strange craft and have this going on all over the country.' But after hearing dozens of such stories, Mack concluded that the abductions were real. Moreover, he discerned a motive behind them: THE ABDUCTORS, IT SEEMS, WERE IMPLANTING MIND-TO-MIND MESSAGES URGING BETTER CARE...
DIED. JOHN E. MACK, 74, controversial Pulitzer prize-winning psychiatrist; after being hit by a drunk driver; in London. Mack, a Harvard Medical School professor, was best known for his studies of people who claimed to have had alien encounters. His 1994 book on the subject, which concluded that "the abduction phenomenon has important philosophical, spiritual and social implications," caused Harvard to consider censure, but a committee later "reaffirmed Dr. Mack's academic freedom...
...Nashiri, considered an associate of Osama bin Laden's and the mastermind of the Cole attack, has been in CIA custody outside the U.S. since 2002, and was tried by the Yemenis in absentia. Four others received prison terms for their roles in the bombing. DIED. JOHN E. MACK, 74, controversial Pulitzer Prize-winning psychiatrist; after being hit by a drunk driver; in London. Mack, a Harvard Medical School professor, was best known for his studies of people who claimed to have had alien encounters. His 1994 book on the subject, which concluded that "the abduction phenomenon has important philosophical...