Word: scientists
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Legions of scholars yesterday paid tribute to the late George B. Kistinkowsky, the renowned Harvard scientist who helped design the first atomic bomb and then spent much of his career opposing nuclear proliferation...
...brief emotional tributes and at a such sequent 17 Quincy St gathering colleagues and friends remembered Kistiakowsky as a brilliant scientist with deep concern over the dangers of nuclear weapons...
...higher priority than leisure. Only 15% admitted going to a bar or nightclub once or twice a week. Seven out of ten said hardly any of their free time is wasted, and six of ten said excess time is best spent when it focuses on goals. Said Social Scientist John Pollock, who supervised the study: "Our flinty Puritan heritage has its hooks in the present...
...help also by adopting what Indiana University Political Scientist Kevin Middlebrook describes as an "open and flexible" attitude toward Mexico. Economist Clark Reynolds of Stanford University warns that Washington should avoid closing the U.S. border to Mexican immigrants in such a way as to spark social conflict within Mexico. The U.S., most experts agree, must also reject any protectionist demands that would put additional pressure on Mexican exporters. Perhaps most counterproductive would be any attempt to seize upon Mexico's troubles as an opportunity to exercise more leverage and, for example, demand preferential oil prices. Says Carlos Rico...
...more importantly, his abiding faith in the wisdom and decency of ordinary people. Even though Kistiakowsky is gone, citizens still can confirm his faith by carrying on the unfinished business of the peace movement. In so doing, they will build an enduring monument to Kistiakowsky himself--a brilliant scientist and a courageous human being whose inspiring deeds stand as testimony to the power possessed by every dedicated and principled individual...