Word: physicist
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...Among Soviet dissidents, however, his arguments are certain to enliven a debate about the nation's future. Solzhenitsyn and his circle reject the argument that truly significant change can come only from within the Communist system. Solzhenitsyn personally takes issue with a second line of thought, propounded by Physicist Andrei Sakharov, who believes that Russia's ultimate hope for freedom lies in a convergence with Western political systems...
...outcome of Jenny Rastall's suit merely confirms what Snow readers were told a dozen novels ago: power and justice are two different things. Despite his cool eye, Snow cannot really be hard on those who are, after all, his fellow clubmen. An overachiever-physicist and parliamentary secretary as well as prolific novelist-Lord Snow cracked the Establishment at about the time the Establishment cracked. More softy than satirist, the clerk's son makes a case for the not-so-happy few even as he chronicles their ineptitude, their folly in a world they never made. These...
...Robert C. Seamans Jr., 56, who will become head of the Energy Research and Development Administration, an agency to be formed by merging most of the functions of the Atomic Energy Commission with those of several other Government research offices. Seamans, an M.I.T.-trained physicist, was Secretary of the Air Force from 1969 to 1973; in that post he complained that he was not informed about the bombing of Cambodia...
Though Leonardo was, as everyone knew, chemist and physicist, mechanical engineer, musician, architect, anatomist and botanist as well as painter, it is not wholly possible to draw a dividing line between art and science in his work. Painting was to him a method of inquiry into the world's structure; it was the empiricism of sight itself. He tended to regard it as the queen of the sciences. His scientific work (on water, wind and their catastrophic powers, for instance) was presented in drawings of ravishing subtlety. Their purely descriptive intent in no way affects their aesthetic power...
Cicerone's report was based on earlier findings by two University of California scientists. It is further supported by Michael McElroy, a Harvard atmospheric physicist, who in independent calculations concluded that the projected 10% annual increase in the use of aerosols would reduce the ozone layer by 10% in 20 years and 40% by 2014, wreaking havoc on terrestrial life...