Word: figments
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Dates: during 1971-1971
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When asked why he never received the Nobel Prize, Kistiakowsky replied, "I'm not a top scientist. That's a figment of somebody's imagination. I'm faithful, hardworking, intelligent, but that's about it. I know of nothing I've done to justify the Nobel Prize...
...diseases boosted by shots. But no doctor takes part in the process; the entire examination is automated. Says one member of the team to a colleague: "That machine-you'd better not let the A.M.A. find out about it." The A.M.A. already knows. Once little more than a figment of the science-fiction writer's imagination, mechanized medicine has become a reality that reaches far beyond electrocardiographs and electroencephalographs. Physicians are turning increasingly to electronics in their efforts to lighten their labors and increase their powers of observation and analysis. In the process, the very nature of medical...
THERE are still those who contend that "Radcliffe is only the figment of the imagination of its alumnae," but for a growing number, the process of change in Radcliffe over the past two years has molded something clearly distinguishable from what Harvard has to offer, and in many instances, clearly preferable. "The warmth and high degree of communication among students and administration at Radcliffe is a thing unheard of at Harvard," observes one Radcliffe senior...