Word: scientists
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...scientist is to find time to accumulate this knowledge, often peripheral to his real interests, close coordination between courses and departments is necessary, the report said. With this coordination lacking in the present curriculum, some students are insufficiently prepared and important material is omitted, it added...
...lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II). Always anxious not to repeat themselves, Rodgers & Hammerstein have turned in Pipe Dream to the flophouse and bordello set of John Steinbeck's Cannery Row. When not cavorting, the bims and bums heave and push at a constantly stalled romance between a popular young scientist and a pretty waif befriended by a madam. To get Doc a microscope, Cannery Row stages a raffle and fancy-dress brawl, and when the lovelorn heroine takes up despairing residence inside a boiler, they have at the lovelorn hero to fetch...
...sciences: "There are too many people who enter the field with a readymade conclusion obtained from their local household gods rather than their laboratories, and proceed to gather facts and footnotes to substantiate it ... There is the sociologist who wants a better society of a certain kind . . . [the] social scientist of a minority group who gathers data about the difficulties of other minority groups ... the second-generation-immigrant historian who writes of the woes of the immigrant in America . . . Now the problems that underlie these concerns are important, but I suggest that too often a value thesis becomes confused with...
...local show called Wonderama, where he shares billing with a drawing teacher and a cooking instructor. The only planetary wanderer left on the network air is CBS's Captain Midnight, who last week, in the fashion of spacemen everywhere, was locked in combat with the inevitable mad scientist...
Another one-time scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study, Morton G. White, professor of Philosophy and chairman of the department of Philosophy, called Harvard's appointment of Oppenheimer "a testimony not only to his great distinction as a scientist, but also an expression of the scholarly world's appreciation of his breadth of interest, his cultivation, and his profound understanding of the situation in which man finds himself today...