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Word: scientist (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

Reader, beware of this deceptive girl, mouthing her piety about "the secret of seeing" being "the pearl of great price," modestly insisting, "I am no scientist. I explore the neighborhood." Here is no gentle romantic twirling a buttercup, no graceful inscriber of 365 inspirational prose poems. As she guides the attention to a muskrat, to a monarch butterfly, a heron or a coot, Miss Dillard is stalking the reader as surely as any predator stalks its game...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Terror and Celebration | 3/18/1974 | See Source »

...which dominate the present controversy. Was the case in its entirety a frameup concocted by the F.B.I.? Or, if indeed espionage did take place, was it really of such consequence that the death penalty should even have been considered? The answer to the second question was stated succinctly by scientist Phillip Morrison who holds a co-patent on the atomic bomb, on the television program The Unquiet Death of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg: "There is no secret to the atomic bomb." Clearly the Rosenbergs were executed for invalid reasons in the sense that it was simply impossible to attribute Soviet...

Author: By Eric M. Breindel, | Title: A Controversy Renewed | 3/12/1974 | See Source »

Another first-year student who also preferred to remain anonymous, explained, "The basic research scientist has built the Harvard Medical School...

Author: By Philip Weiss, | Title: Scientists Benefit In Medical School Curriculum Change | 3/11/1974 | See Source »

...England, a poll of its readers by the New Scientist indicates that nearly 70% of the respondents (mainly scientists and technicians) believe in the possibility of extrasensory perception...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Boom Times on the Psychic Frontier | 3/4/1974 | See Source »

...investigators and reporters will find a new meaning for Koestler's roots of coincidence. A loose confederacy of parapsychologists parodies the notion of the scientific method. Harold Puthoff, one of the two S.R.I, investigators of Uri Geller, is singled out in The Secret Life of Plants as a reputable scientist who has been experimenting with the response of one chicken egg to the breaking of another. He is also a promoter of the bizarre and controversial cult of Scientology, which Ingo Swann, another psychic tested by S.R.I., also practices. William Targ, a Putnam executive, recently contracted to publish Astronaut...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Boom Times on the Psychic Frontier | 3/4/1974 | See Source »

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