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Word: scientists (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...players are dark on a field yellow with late afternoon sunlight against a dark background of mine breakers and hills; Jury, whose procession of fat and lean brainless bourgeois figures directly recalled Daumier's treatments of the same subject; The Liberals, which presents, out on a limb, the Scientist, the Man who Sees Both Sides, the Indecisive Man, the Scholar, the Hysterical Mystic, the Infantile Man, the Man who Waits for the Right Time, while red-bannered masses see the forward and underneath...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Underdog Lover | 11/8/1937 | See Source »

...that the world of men is in bad shape. What distinguishes Anthropologist Hooton from most other calamity-howlers, however, is that his unflattering comments are backed up by a great store of information on the biological history and present condition of Homo sapiens, and that although he is a scientist he speaks not only with clarity but with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Hooton's Horrors | 11/8/1937 | See Source »

Edgar Bright Wilson, Jr., assistant professor of Chemistry, has received the $1,000 award of the American Chemical Society which is awarded to "a scientist under 31 years of age and of unusual promise...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: E. B. Wilson Receives Chemical Society Prize for Ability | 11/2/1937 | See Source »

...promising young physicist from the University of California, Ernest Orlando Lawrence, left his sunny campus and the ramshackle old building in which he was working, traveled eastward across the U. S. and across the Atlantic to attend a European scientific conference in Brussels. He was the only U. S. scientist invited. He had invented and was already making formidable use of a curious and powerful atomic weapon-a "cyclotron" that imparted great speeds to projectiles for smashing atoms by whirling them around in a strong magnetic field...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Cyclotron Man | 11/1/1937 | See Source »

...scientist can look at a cat, but few have looked with the spectacular results described in Science last week by Drs. Sam Lillard Clark and James W. Ward of Vanderbilt University. Their look threw much needed light on the relations of the cat's hind brain to the rest of its body. The front part of the brain (cerebrum) governs intelligence and will power. The rear part (cerebellum) governs action. In that region of a cat's brain the experimenters drilled several small holes into which they screwed small steel tubes. This arrangement allowed them to touch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Doctors & Cats | 11/1/1937 | See Source »

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