Word: predicters
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...discontent of such people has led the government to predict widespread food riots soon. Food Minister C. Subramaniam blames hoarding by wholesalers for much of the trouble, declares that some merchants have actually bribed railwaymen to slow down food trains so that temporary scarcities will force prices up in some critical areas, permitting them to make a killing. Recently he warned wholesalers at Hyderabad: "If you do not discipline yourselves, and continue exploiting the people, the government will nationalize the entire trade...
...filtering system itself, called glomerulonephritis. Richard Bright, who died before Pasteur even suggested the microbial theory of infectious diseases, noted that many victims of this kidney disorder had recently recovered from scarlet fever. Now that scarlet fever is known to be caused by streptococci, said Dr. Thompson, physicians can predict an outbreak of nephritis after a scarlet-fever epidemic...
...called nephrosis, but is now labeled the nephrotic syndrome. Its origins are unknown, said Cornell's Dr. E. Lovell Becker, though sometimes it clearly follows an earlier kidney disease, or it is the result of an entirely different disease, such as diabetes. Even its course is impossible to predict. "The only thing certain," said Dr. Becker, "is that a fair number of these patients will go on to recover...
...companies that produce what the government suggests. Not long ago, the Common Market paid Massé the compliment of setting up a similar body to plan for the Six. An expert in the complex field of the mathematics of economics, Massé has sharpened his colleagues' ability to predict the consequences of some policies and to propose counteractions by changing interest rates and money supplies...
...Goldwater is nominated," said the Chicago Sun-Times, "we predict that he will not carry more than two states-not necessarily Maine and Vermont." The Washington Star published a declaration of its own pride at having opposed well before California "a candidate so manifestly unsuited to the high and difficult office he seeks." Said the Nashville Tennessean: "What little identification with the 20th century the Republican Party has been able to achieve was shattered by the galloping hooves of Senator Goldwater's horse back program." Noting his victory in California, the New York Herald Tribune said: "We didn...