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Word: maze (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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While most seniors spent this year writing theses for a limited audience, one senior decided to share his thesis experience and construct a life-size maze in the Lowell House courtyard last week...

Author: By Jaleh Poorooshasb, | Title: Labyrinth Charms Passersby | 5/3/1977 | See Source »

Charles F. Kahn '77, a concentrator in Visual and Environmental Studies and Psychology and Social Relations, said yesterday the maze is a "physical expression of the concepts in my senior thesis...

Author: By Jaleh Poorooshasb, | Title: Labyrinth Charms Passersby | 5/3/1977 | See Source »

...seats during the performance. At one point in the second act, the curtains threaten to tumble down and enclose the backstage audience completely, only to creep sheepishly and mischievously back up again. During the intermission, the cast meanders in and tears back the white sheets to reveal the insane maze-like set with everything from bathtubs, to free-standing fireplaces and rows of chandeliers hanging a foot off the ground and a hundred other incongruous objects littered across the stage. As in the first act, there is peripatetic delight in easily-overlooked details, like a severed mannequin hand here...

Author: By Ta-knang Chang, | Title: A Play On Words | 4/21/1977 | See Source »

...produce bomb-grade plutonium even as they produce energy. The Schlesinger program will call for a modest acceleration in the building of present fission reactors and will place great emphasis on safety precautions. But it will also call for a standardized design intended to speed construction. Owing to a maze of regulations and community misgivings, it now takes up to eleven years to build a reactor in the U.S., v. only 3½ in Japan. Schlesinger's team hopes that standardizing reactor design will shorten construction time...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLICY: SUPERBRAIN'S SUPERPROBLEM | 4/4/1977 | See Source »

...entire civilization be unconscious? Jaynes' answer: much the same way that sleepwalkers and hypnotized people function without awareness. According to Jaynes, humans began to develop language around 100,000 B.C., but lived with virtually no inner life until about 10,000 B.C. Like rats in a maze, humans could solve problems, and had crude abilities to think and remember. But there was no introspection, no independent will, no ability to imagine or ponder the past and future...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: The Lost Voices of the Gods | 3/14/1977 | See Source »

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