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Word: scientistic (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...simple friendliness of the Roosevelt greeting made sense to President Prado. Peru's executive is no stuffed shirt. His father was twice President of Peru; a brother, the late Leoncio, is a national hero. Manuel Prado was a scientist, an industrial manager, a banker. But his rise had been a hard grind. His first political experience, as superintendent of a polling station in the elections of 1912, was a beating by a hostile mob. While an undergraduate at Peru's University of San Marcos, he enlisted in the Army as a private, saw front-line service during...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Neighbors | 5/18/1942 | See Source »

Behind the curtain of secrecy great discoveries are piling up. They will burst upon the post-war world with an incalculable impact. Is war's diversion and stimulus of research for better or worse? Scientists disagree. "If the war lasts for two more years," said a University of California scientist, "much of the progress in the various fields of research will be the equivalent of ten years of peacetime work...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Science Hush-Hushed | 5/11/1942 | See Source »

Franklin D. Roosevelt, for whom innumerable children have been named, now has a small sea animal namesake: an amphipod crustacean, related to the shrimp, lobster and crab, which inhabits Magdalena Bay on the coast of Lower California, and which was discovered there by a Smithsonian scientist in 1938. The name is much longer than the quarter-inch crustacean itself: Neomeganphopus roosevelti...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Presidential Crustacean | 4/20/1942 | See Source »

...slight, gentle little man with big ears and dreamy eyes, he has the calm, sad face of a moonstruck mystic. The look is misleading. A Puritan in his personal life, abstemious, logical in argument, part Indian, part Italian, philosopher, archeologist, scientist, scholar, Lombardo is a man of power. No longer head of C.T.M. , he is still leader of the C.T.A.L., the loosely knit Confederation of Latin American Workers. That fact, last week, was the key to his mission...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FOREIGN RELATIONS: Man with a Mission | 4/13/1942 | See Source »

...scientist, scholar, writer or artist who is awarded one, a Guggenheim Fellowship usually means a year of extracurricular leisure to work unhurriedly on a pet project. But last week the Guggenheim Foundation, awarding 82 fellowships for the coming year, found it necessary to warn its fellows that this is a year when leisure cannot be guaranteed; its awards are subject to interruption for calls to Government service. Example: Stanford University's Dr. Merrill Kelley Bennett, who went to Honolulu last summer as a Guggenheim fellow to study food, wound up as a statistician in the Food Control office, keeping...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Guggenheim Fellows | 4/13/1942 | See Source »

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