Word: physicists
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...coups, who in 1940 went to Vichy France, as head of a privately sponsored Emergency Relief Committee ostensibly organized to provide money for blacklisted intellectuals, in reality operated for 24 months as an underground railroad, spiriting some 1,500 people out of the country (among them: Painter Marc Chagall, Physicist Otto Meyerhoff) until authorities at last expelled Fry; of a heart attack; in Easton, Conn...
...million people in the U.S. are exposed each year to diagnostic medical X rays; 50 million have dental X rays; 8,000,000 are fluoroscoped. According to Karl Z. Morgan, health physicist on the 1943 Manhattan Project and now at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, many of the millions are probably being dangerously overexposed to radiation. Before the Senate Commerce Committee last week, Dr. Morgan admitted that statistics on radiation hazards are guesses at best-but he suggested that anywhere from 3,500 to 30,000 U.S. deaths may result each year from the cumulative effects of radiation...
...grown older, Lacoste has turned more and more of a broad business empire over to his sons. Bernard Lacoste, 36, a Princeton graduate, bosses the sporting goods com pany, oversees a line that includes sweat ers, socks and tennis-racket covers. Son Francois, 34, a Stanford University-trained physicist, is a research and development director at Lacoste's other major company. In 1934, Lacoste teamed with the Bendix Corp. to form Air Equipement, a French company, to make airplane starters. The com pany has since been merged into D.B.A...
What of the possibility that an advanced culture may somehow have learned to circumvent the Einstein limit, and thus be able to send craft to distant stars at incredible speeds? Says one physicist: "My God, could our whole science just be a fiction completely unrelated to what the UFOs might have? All this earthly science-F equals ma and all the rest that I so much believe in-could it really be something else?" Many laymen, baffled by the scientists anyway, might find the overthrow of all their lore quite entertaining. But most scientists insist that their laws are universal...
...startling applications, radioactive dating is inadequate for objects that are very small or contain only tiny traces of radioactive matter. Hence the significance of two recent dating techniques developed largely by Physicist Robert M. Walker of Washington University in St. Louis...