Word: scientistic
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...affairs of state comes at a rather delicate time. We have just been assaulted not only by a cascade of Washington-power books but also by their movie and television adaptations. Fiction and truth seem to blend. Robert Chartrand, the Library of Congress's top information-systems scientist, says that even in his orderly mind, dedicated to quick retrieval of facts, there is difficulty sorting out what is real...
...They blame it for inflation and unemployment and think it's time for a change." Political Scientist Raymond Aron concurred: "The left has not necessarily lost the election. The country is in a bad mood and tired of seeing the same faces in government. Indeed, the Socialists might even get more votes if they are not linked to the Communists...
Mildred S. Dressenhaus--"The Scientist" at the Cambridge Forum, 3 Church St., at 8 Succesful Motivation of Ghetto Students--Frederick Douglass Room, 77 Dunster St. at 7:30 U.S. Nuclear Nonprollferation Policy--CFIA room...
...diagrams in Biohazard, no photographs and no glossary. Nonetheless there is a great deal of science discussed but in a manner more readable than meaningful. Rogers gives enough of the wrong kind of details to confuse the average reader but not enough of the right kind to satisfy a scientist...
Ever since July 1974, when they first called public attention to the possible hazards of their research, the recombinant DNA researchers have kept non-scientists almost completely outside of the regulatory process. For example, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Recombinant DNA Molecule Program Advisory Committee had only one non-scientist among 16 members. Furthermore, a recombinant researcher, David Hogness of Stanford, headed a subcommittee which drafted guidelines for the research. Jonathan King of Science for the People likened the situation to "having the chairman of General Motors write the specifications for safety belts...