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Your chart of religious ramifications, captioned "Christian Chaos (Simplified)," was most interesting as well as informative. But I looked in vain for the two of distinctly American origin-the Church of the Latter-Day Saints (Joseph Smith, founder) and the Church of Christ, Scientist (Mary Baker Eddy, founder...
Science Writer Jack Leonard is too tall for his job. In this day of jet fighters and radar, when a scientist's work may soon be tested in the cockpit, Leonard has trouble folding his 6 ft. 2 frame inside some places where he finds his stories...
...producing piles at Hanford. After the war, he was a senior officer at Harwell, the British atomic research center. Pontecorvo, whose brother and sister were lifelong Communists, might have been betraying reactor data from 1943 on, the committee guessed. He was rated by some colleagues as an even abler scientist than Fuchs. After Fuchs, said the committee, "Pontecorvo may be plausibly rated as the second deadliest betrayer . . . Certain it is that Russia today possesses nuclear reactors...
...race to put scientific discoveries to practical and profitable use, many a British scientist was convinced that Britain had fallen far behind the field. Last Week the London Observer thought it had found both the cause and the cure. Wrote the Observer...
Greenglass is no scientist (at Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute he flunked eight courses out of eight), and some of his testimony made little scientific sense. He did reveal, however, the important fact that the bomb was set off by an "implosion"; i.e., an explosion that directs much of its force inwards (see diagram...