He was till recently the head scientist at the world's first speleological institute. |
|
Instead, the scientist has to take account of both logical actions and non-logical actions on an empirical level. |
|
The scientist and Nelson, along with the boat's bathyscaphe was amazingly swallowed by a huge whale. |
|
Their spiritual leader is a vulturish photographer and scientist named Vaughan, played with intricate obsession by Montreal actor Elias Koteas. |
|
He is a famous scientist in algology study, and has found 22 new species of algae. |
|
The scientist whose company first mapped the human genome has formed a company to create life. |
|
He's an otherwise decent scientist possessed by the swirling, serpentine tentacles that continually whisper in his ears. |
|
He was a scientist of absolute integrity and total dedication, with an incredible gift for efficiency. |
|
The social scientist will almost certainly be aiming to place the interpretations that have been elicited into a social scientific frame. |
|
The social scientist analyzes the interchanges of the disputants from the standpoint that there is a correct position and an incorrect one. |
|
Any scientist worth their salt will point out many ways in which their theories can be proven wrong. |
|
My father was a scientist studying the virus and when Diana got it he devoted his life to finding a cure. |
|
A hologram image of a scientist walked across the courtroom toward Raven's bench and spoke loudly so that all in the room could hear him. |
|
Hypotheses are suppositions about causes which may be entertained by a scientist in cases where it is not practical to induce the separate laws. |
|
And it is to the world that is there that the scientist must go to confirm or disconfirm the hypothetical objects of scientific theory. |
|
How can you judge a scientist from this century against somebody who was working in the fourteenth or fifteenth century? |
|
Being a scientist at heart, Gorman set up a control experiment with a man born at the same time and the same place as himself. |
|
Afterward, in private, I asked the chief scientist where he got the funding for such an ambitious, inspiring, yet impractical experiment. |
|
He aced in computer and science, and could make it as a scientist or even an inventor one day. |
|
Journalists seek to profile any engineer or scientist who claims to turn gallium into gold. |
|
|
Every scientist held an air of great anxiety and anticipation, yet also of fear, dread, and horror as they worked. |
|
The WWF scientist says the conservation record of the U.S. doesn't suggest it's a great place for preserving big, endangered mammals. |
|
Kelly was a scientist for the Ministry of Defence, with expertise in weapons and germ warfare. |
|
If they're not met, the offending scientist and the institution he works for is defunded. |
|
A scientist who believes in the Creator is suspected of cooking the evidence to support his belief. |
|
I was born in New York, went to all the right schools, was a nerdy scientist since the time I was about six. |
|
A scientist who served seven years in prison for trying to poison his wife has secured a job teaching ethics, university officials said today. |
|
At this point, our beardy scientist and his big fish cronies are left to their own devices. |
|
I'd have an easier time believing that Nick was a rocket scientist than a mean spirited putz. |
|
The representing homomorphisms allow the scientist to bring the powerful resources of set theory to bear on the surrogates. |
|
The scientist paid much attention to studies on Scythian culture and its relations with the Caucasus and the Near East. |
|
Each of the named individuals is a scientist who engages in research involving animals. |
|
People expect a political scientist to be objective, some kind of political eunuch. |
|
Neither Arago nor any other scientist could demonstrate that light must be either a stream of emitted corpuscles or a wave motion. |
|
Students rotated from one scientist to another, assisting with data collection, and gained insight into each scientist's particular area. |
|
Now, a scientist believes male dwarf minke whales may make a sci-fi sound to attract females. |
|
But at the time, no scientist had connected those black seed grains with ergotism. |
|
He sees himself as the applied scientist who will bring the benisons of molecular biology to practical use. |
|
It also doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out this is junk science. |
|
He requested a public debate with any warmist scientist to discuss this issue. |
|
|
His work as a social scientist emphasizes transregional comparison and explores the religious ecumene's socio-political trajectories. |
|
For this reason a postdoctoral fellowship is an imperative if one is to truly become a nurse scientist with a well planned research career. |
|
The scientist says that when the 2000 fire roared through, the ungrazed pastures fared the worst. |
|
The billy goat is far more dangerous than the bear and mountain lion combined, assuming some mad scientist could breed a mountain bear lion. |
|
Mr. Russell is currently working on a film about the great scientist of Yugoslav origin, Nikola Tesla. |
|
The scientist watches as eagles dive into the river, emerging laboriously moments later with silver salmon firmly in their talons. |
|
Institute scientist Jim Salinger said the fine, settled winter weather was caused by more anticyclones than usual across northern New Zealand. |
|
In spite of his recognition of transference and counter-transference, Freud continued to maintain that he was a scientist until his death. |
|
When an artist and a scientist got together they came up with a unique take on fashion. |
|
It would be difficult to find a respected scientific society or scientist of any reputability to support the cause. |
|
Back in the misty, early days of computing, famed computer scientist John Backus invented a programming language called Fortran. |
|
We aim to recruit a post-doctoral scientist to work on a research programme on autophagy and neurodegeneration using in vivo approaches in mice. |
|
The actress plays Eve, a beautiful scientist researching into the working of the human heart. |
|
A U.S. scientist says this male anglerfish found in the Philippines is the smallest fish in the world. |
|
He looked wet through and filthy at the same time, totally dishevelled, more like the mad scientist than the nutty professor. |
|
A company is originally founded by an engineer or scientist with an entrepreneurial streak. |
|
A clinical laboratory scientist is pooling six units of cryoprecipitate for a patient. |
|
He once even dreamed of being a poet, thinker, or a scientist but now it seems that he is just a money earner. |
|
Kuhn showed that what counts as a fact to a scientist depends on the current paradigm. |
|
For the scientist who has lived by his faith in the power of reason, the story ends like a bad dream. |
|
|
To lend weight to this, he adds the interpretation of a social scientist and an academician. |
|
No mad scientist film ever seemed to operate on such a direct and conscious level of Old Testament thunderousness. |
|
Tuning is carried out by an audiological scientist using a special computer to test what the patient can hear. |
|
I think the assumptions about what is required to be a good scientist need to be inspected closely. |
|
If he succeeds, the scientist will become the first to successfully create a new life form in a test tube. |
|
So, this scientist then spent a good few months examining the genetics of these lambs. |
|
I have a wide variety of clients, ranging from a top scientist under pressure to a teenager with eating disorders. |
|
One writer recounted a story about a scientist who stopped at a garage in America and began to chat to the service attendant. |
|
You don't have to be a rocket scientist to know that we are just giving teams a leg-up all the time. |
|
We had to return to the site where the scientist had discovered the rock in order to find more. |
|
Diversity is still measured by the yardstick developed by Russian scientist N I Vavilov half a century ago. |
|
But why risk his reputation as a scientist by perpetuating such a falsehood? |
|
In 1901 he isolated adrenaline from the supradrenal gland and was the first scientist to discover gland hormones in pure form. |
|
I recall hearing some scientist mention that mass extinctions seem to occur in very ordered cycles. |
|
They work for Dr Sid now, who, despite his name, is a scientist and thinker of international repute. |
|
Gary Sinise plays a government scientist who may or may not be a replicant planted by a hostile alien race. |
|
A young scientist invents a material that is indestructible and repels dirt. |
|
If anything, the average market value of a scientist seems to be going down in real terms. |
|
March flies were of great interest to another scientist safe from their stings in his mainland laboratory. |
|
As any scientist knows, a hypothesis is as precious to its discoverer as a child to its parents. |
|
|
Cognitive scientist Guy Claxton has unearthed the unconscious throughout history. |
|
Last's sense of rhythm is as developed as any rap, dancehall, broken beat, or dubstep scientist you'd care to throw up. |
|
One scientist first accepted the Epicurean objection to determinism, and then changed his mind. |
|
His face displays a limited emotional range and, at times, his portrayal of the maverick scientist is boring. |
|
One of the best levels in the game has a timid scientist driving a dune buggy while you man the rear-mounted machine gun. |
|
A young scientist named Henry Moseley experimented with bombarding atoms of different elements with x rays. |
|
The scientist decided to take part in the epoch-making event and joined another expedition devoted to Atlantis. |
|
While on sabbatical in 1997, the scientist collected preserved leaves from university and museum collections in Europe and the Americas. |
|
The scientist looked at imposex in the dog whelk, a common snail along the coast of New South Wales. |
|
Also included is Nightmare Weekend, the 1986 classic about a mad scientist turning young ladies into killer zombie fiends. |
|
The scientist nimbly punched a short combo and a green light acknowledged a correct code. |
|
Tim Kay, for example, was a Caltech computer scientist who had written a program for one of the first search engines for Internet white pages. |
|
Some scientist fear a buildup of such materials would eventually sabotage a person's ability to fight off infection. |
|
A Brain scientist has teamed up with electronics wizards to design a system for giving dozy drivers a wake-up call. |
|
People have argued that Einstein grew up as a scientist while he was developing the general theory. |
|
Now the BBC has to either admit that it misquoted a mourned scientist or call him a liar. |
|
It also noted a scientist had been asked to take botulin home to his fridge to hide but had refused. |
|
Once, at a press conference, he was asked if his thinking as a scientist could conform to the thinking of a politician. |
|
The chief safety scientist of American phone companies was sacked when he found out too much. |
|
Forensic scientist Karol Higgins usually uses a microscope when looking for minute clues to help solve crimes. |
|
|
After Apollo 14 landed, a Forest Service scientist germinated the seeds at NASA's manned space center at Houston. |
|
One function for precursors is to give legitimacy to the views of the modern scientist and deflect criticism to dead white males. |
|
Soxhlet is also known as the first scientist who fractionated the milk proteins in casein, albumin, globulin and lactoprotein. |
|
It was translucent and obviously a ghost or a close variation of a specter, bowing at the young scientist courteously. |
|
Using chemical signals in larval mussel shells, the scientist will differentiate juveniles that were spawned locally from those from other places. |
|
The American team, on the other hand, proposed the name rutherfordium for the new element, in honor of the great British scientist Sir Ernest Rutherford. |
|
Another scientist suggested that perhaps her plants were not habituated, just tuckered out. |
|
A paleontologist is a scientist who studies aspects such as morphology, behavior, and how ancient life interacted with their environment. |
|
If you know a scientist news service which isn't listed here, please report it to me. |
|
Mr Kalam, a former government scientist with a foppish fringe, was unusually popular, mainly because he was not a politician. |
|
Any woman scientist who garners the slightest approval from the field or the public wins my respect and admiration, if only because I know how hard it is. |
|
I decided to conduct an experiment, as both scientist and guinea pig. |
|
Someday, it may even be possible for the soul of a skeptical scientist to orbit into the empyrean, carrying his karma with him, looking for a suitable body to be born into! |
|
This Polish scientist and freedom fighter anticipated 175 years ago exactly the main issues, we now think are also of importance. |
|
The Science and Technology Centers in Moscow and Kiev have played an important role in GP scientist redirection and engagement activities. |
|
The stereotype image of a scientist looks so 'uncool' in children's eyes that it may discourage them to express an interest. |
|
The only frontiers a scientist battles with and tries to push back are the frontiers of knowledge. |
|
Only projects that have won a top prize at a national young scientist competition can participate in the EU Contest. |
|
Being a scientist does not mean being cooped up in a laboratory surrounded by test tubes. |
|
One scientist has spent eight years attempting to extract sunbeams from cucumbers. |
|
|
Snake is dispatched to an area in Russia to exfiltrate a Russian scientist who's working on the development of a new, highly destructive mobile tank platform. |
|
As a scientist I'd need more detail before making an extrapolation. |
|
I am a research scientist in my country and I cannot hear the expression knowledge-based society' without flinching. |
|
Despite the likelihood that humans are alone in the universe, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence will continue, said famed scientist Jill Tarter. |
|
One Cape Breton University scientist is fighting back with a program to warn the public to be vigilant against the onslaught. |
|
The man seemed always to be regarding her with a bemused look, like a scientist confronted with a curious specimen. |
|
Maybe some American scientist in a laboratory somewhere is about to make a breakthrough. |
|
A scientist with a Doctor of Philosophy in plant physiology, Marshall became independently wealthy after the death of his father. |
|
And sociologist Pierre Bourdieu was a scientist who really looked into poverty and inequalities in France. |
|
Summer trout fishermen often venture forth with enough sonar gear to make any would-be mad scientist green with envy. |
|
He added that the goal was not to make everyone a scientist but rather to ensure basic literacy in the language of science among all school-leavers and graduates. |
|
Catharine's perspective on the natural world was that of scientist and moralist. |
|
Lack of testosterone leaves men bad-tempered, emotional, depressed and suffering from Irritable Male Syndrome, scientist Gerald Lincoln told BBC radio's recently. |
|
Every child is a doctor in waiting, a lawyer in waiting or a scientist of tomorrow, and every child could be our next great leader. |
|
As a scientist in the government, if you want to move ahead you will have to set your sights on management. |
|
It may be a complex formula, but balancing family life and the work of a top-level scientist is not impossible. |
|
Several of them carried burning torches and I had a flash of old horror films, the mob of villagers going after the mad scientist and his monster. |
|
One scientist noted that, in general, colonization of microbes in the gut is easier to achieve at a lower dosage in food than with a supplement. |
|
The new series must chart the story of how Caesar grows from faithful pet-cum-laboratory subject of a San Francisco scientist to become the leader of the shrewdness of apes. |
|
As one social scientist put it, what nature hath joined together, multiple regression cannot put asunder. |
|
|
I am a basic scientist with an interest in understanding how the brain is formed and how it may be regenerated after injury or disease. |
|
Fred is a quiet, unassuming, self-contained scientist with a tremendous capacity for seeing a difficult practical problem through to its conclusion. |
|
Mayhem and hilarity ensue when a scientist travels back in time and gets mixed up with characters from William Shakespeare's play, Hamlet! |
|
She later gained recognized as the most expert scientist on the paleontology of the Ottawa-Saint Lawrence region. |
|
Ms Zewdie has worked in the AIDS response for twenty years in many roles, including scientist and strategist. |
|
The theoretical scientist is one whose exertions are mental rather than physical, who makes discoveries by taking thought rather than by turning stones. |
|
Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon and Foreign Secretary Jack Straw yesterday side-stepped a barrage of questions over the death of Government scientist Dr David Kelly. |
|
She pitied the poor scientist who'd caught the major part of his wrath. |
|
In forensic science laboratories, a second scientist validates each case. |
|
A high-flying young Chorley scientist is focusing on a career path which could help save thousands of lives after receiving record marks in her degree. |
|
A scientist from Brazil, found that weekly sprays of milk controlled powdery mildew in zucchini just as effectively as synthetic fungicides such as fenarimol or benomyl. |
|
The composer Handel lodged in the house for three years towards the end of his life while the scientist Henry Cavendish had a room here during his youth. |
|
In 1933, while researching the effects of high pressure on chemical reactants, a fellow scientist managed to produce a waxy solid from ethylene and benzaldehyde. |
|
But one scientist on the team said the beasts might have prevailed had the asteroid struck earlier or later than it did. |
|
The scientist James Lovelock named his influential theory of global interconnectedness the gaia hypothesis after her. |
|
You would be one of the 350 trainees with the chance of a lifetime to work with a senior scientist or attend one of our dozen courses. |
|
The natural scientist studies them as things that are subject to the laws of nature, as things that move and undergo change. |
|
It is not certain, however, that this natural scientist and scholar actually observed the free element. |
|
The job of a scientist is to make sense out of many small details and facts. |
|
What surprise the spirit of the scientist feels when it abandons this world and comes to present itself before the divine truth. |
|
|
Desha points to the not-for-profit Biomimicry Institute, founded by the eminent US natural scientist Janine Benyus. |
|
Your campaigners and funded scientist have spent many years in Africa researching the impact of wild animals being caught for food. |
|
Our resident scientist Mr Trakatellis says that, in a few years' time, we shall have proof for everything. |
|
The cave of Pazin was first mentioned in 1770 by Alberto Fortis, natural scientist from Padua in his study of the karst underground in Istria. |
|
We would train a local scientist to manage the database and carry out some of the further analysis. |
|
One would not have to be a political rocket scientist to understand why. |
|
Along with their role to carry out the research, a scientist is also responsible for managing the science projects. |
|
The organisation has just one scientist and he's been a warmist for years. |
|
But the favourable ratio within the assistant scientist staff is still not reflected in a corresponding ratio within the senior scientist staff. |
|
A Japanese scientist has unveiled the latest technology to produce ethanol and bio-diesel to help replace the use of fossil fuels in the near future. |
|
My friend the political scientist Tom Schaller said all this back in 2008, in his book Whistling Past dixie. |
|
But Dr. Allen Hershkowitz, senior scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council, argues that tree farming is really the lesser of two evils. |
|
Would a male scientist have drawn such an obit opening about his great fatherhood skills? |
|
A CDC scientist says he and his colleagues hid research regarding the MMR vaccine and autism. |
|
Studies by a scientist at the University of Maryland show that male bowerbirds modify their courtship rituals based on the females' body language. |
|
This Swedish scientist made the first chemical classification of minerals and devised a scheme for the world's rocks that Werner later perfected as Neptunism. |
|
His arguments, phrased in the vocabulary of the modern scientist and based upon the latest of neurological studies, are those of nineteenth century liberalism. |
|
Your potential employee doesn't need to be a rocket scientist to come up with satisfactory answers to typical problems in the job they are applying for. |
|
But such now is the power and pre-eminence of science in the culture of the West, that the temptation for the scientist to play God is greater than ever. |
|
Another scientist reported grizzlies flipping over rocks to lick up army cutworm moths, a fat-bodied insect that hides by day in the high-altitude talus slopes in the Rockies. |
|
|
The quirky sci-fi thriller Transcendence finds depp playing a scientist whose brain is downloaded onto a supercomputer. |
|
When the young Danish scientist Bjorn Lomborg recently published his The Sceptical Environmentalist, a horde of angry commentators dismissed him as a crank. |
|
When Monica is re-born by a male scientist figure in this future society, an event that echoes the immaculate conception birth of David, she is the woman-as-mother. |
|
The housing renovations are almost complete and hubby Ford is an awfully busy scientist with a power career that eclipses most of the couple's concerns. |
|
Moving among the great and the good, he became a government adviser, and invited Louis Pasteur, the foremost scientist of his day, to stay with him. |
|
As Brynor neared, he glanced at each of us in turn with the casual, detached disinterest of a scientist examining a particularly repulsive insect. |
|
In his search for the beginning and the end of cosmical reality, the modern scientist doesn't reject the paradigm of the artist's imagination. |
|
Most coverage of his problems portrays the computer scientist as the victim of a political witch-hunt, and so misses the real story, which is about his links to terrorism. |
|
Body sensor computing holds its original appeal for the computer scientist on the founding team. |
|
Project MAC was first directed by MIT computer scientist Robert M. Fano, with computer scientist Fernando José Corbató as a founding member. |
|
Several experts' missions were carried out, and a computer scientist from IOWater was seconded in Kiev for a 13-month duration. |
|
One of the advantages of Novakod's technology is that a computer scientist doesn't need to know anything about hardware to program an algorithm. |
|
Pupils attending a workshop at a Bradford school yesterday were reaching for the stars when a rocket scientist dropped in to give a lesson in rocket-making. |
|
I'm sad to say that my success as a basketball scientist was short-lived. |
|
So here we are, at the milestone issue, with Peter a 30-something scientist who might or might not be dating Mary Jane still. |
|
The white witch cast a blocking spell in April 2001 in an attempt to scupper plans by Swedish scientist Jan Sundberg to trap the elusive creature. |
|
In 2000, the talented computer scientist retired after 20 years with Logitech's management. |
|
In 1994, for example, Marc Andreessen was a talented young computer scientist with an innovative idea. |
|
The Military has hired world-renowned scientist Chanel Flores to explore a mysterious island that has suddenly appeared in the Bermuda Triangle! |
|
No notes were taken of what the scientist said, the only record of the interview being jottings into a personal organiser made several hours later. |
|
|
Should a professor choose to reject the study or insist on changes not agreeable to the sponsor, another university scientist will very likely be more solicitous. |
|
According to Russian scientist I.I. Brekhman in 1958, adaptogenic herbs like Siberian Ginseng, work to normalize all bodily systems and functions. |
|
The protection we seek is not a luxury, not a dream by some mad scientist who just wants to spend money for the sake of it. |
|
The physicist Joseph Rotblat was the only scientist to leave the project that developed the atom bomb, the Manhattan Project, for reasons of personal conscience. |
|
Jarvis introduces several approaches that serve the applied scientist well-case study, action research, collaborative arrangements, and the use of documents and surveys. |
|
Typically, it takes people from sea level five to seven days to acclimate to the elevation, said Dr. Chuck Fulco, the lead scientist on the Army's research team. |
|
Thanks to the previous researches of the scientist there was possible a destruction of microorganisms and the control of microbic infection. |
|
That team is led by Swedish scientist ake Sellstrom, who visited Washington recently. |
|
When meeting a scientist who also believes in divinity, the defiantly atheist New York Times science writer Natalie Angier starts popping mental veins. |
|
The idea was conceived by a food scientist at Brigham Young University, who added dry ice to the cultured dairy on a lark. |
|
He asked what type of profile the BIPM would be looking for: a public relations person, or a scientist with good people skills? |
|
His principal detractor over his support of probabilism was Blaise Pascal, French scientist and religious philosopher. |
|
In 1915 the Italian scientist Leone Lattes developed a simple method for determining the blood type of a dried bloodstain. |
|
Curie combined the intellect of a first-rate scientist with the skill of a first-rate craftsman and the patience of a first-rate charwoman. |
|
And for the next few days, the exhausted scientist slept almost round the clock, making up for the months when he often worked 36 hours at a stretch. |
|
But that is no excuse for treating the scientist like a child who does not know what is good for him and must be protected by the parental arm of PC Plod. |
|
It does not take a rocket scientist to know what is coming in from the EI account and what is going out. |
|
The movie is about a scientist who discovers the secret of invisibility, then goes berserk from the ravaging effects the experimental chemicals have on his brain. |
|
It does not take a rocket scientist to figure out the problems associated with such a dangerous activity. |
|
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand that if there is increased fraud, there is increased liability. |
|
|
It would not take a rocket scientist to figure out that some of those spots might be targets. |
|
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to know how much I've got in my pocket today. |
|
You don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out that a lot of money is wasted purifying water that we just flush away. |
|
It didn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that there was nothing in the proposed pension reforms that would benefit the employees. |
|
We do not have to be a rocket scientist to know it will make that house cost more. |
|
A doctoral degree is usually required for employment as a research scientist in meteorology. |
|
In this short movie a scientist puts Paris to sleep except for the Tower's night watchman and five people arrived by plane. |
|
One young scientist informant told me that the cultural norm in DFO is to not rock the boat, and that this cultural norm intimidates scientists. |
|
One example is what the American computer scientist John McCarthy called reasoning by circumscription. |
|
Now, I took science in university, but I'm not a scientist by any stretch of the imagination. |
|
Mr. Blackwell was first educated as a scientist and engineer in radio astronomy. |
|
Every now and then the scientist and anthropologists discovers new evidences, which fortify India's claim of being culturally most advanced in the ancient times. |
|
A young scientist found a way to destroy Godzilla, but unfortunately his invention could also be used as a weapon of mass destruction. |
|
Almost anyone who grinds through grad school and postdocs to get a faculty job as a scientist could be making more money for less work doing something else. |
|
I don't think any climate scientist can say for certain when we will reach the point at which we need to pull the ripcord. |
|
But when she meets a scientist named Wally Yez in the apple-pie line at a clambake, her life takes a turn toward romance. |
|
Fisheries scientist Daniel Pauly and economist Ussif Rashid Sumaila have examined subsidies paid to bottom trawl fleets around the world. |
|
Dawkins has also been strongly critical of the Gaia hypothesis of the independent scientist James Lovelock. |
|
At the same time, the eminent scientist and Cornishman Humphry Davy was also looking at the problem. |
|
London University's first Warden was Leonard Horner, who was the first scientist to head a British university. |
|
|
Unlike his scientist friends, he now thought there was no unbridgeable gap between humans and animals. |
|
Cyborg scientist Kevin Warwick is also a Coventrian, as is Sir John Egan, industrialist and former Chief Executive of Jaguar Cars. |
|
The scientist attached a pinger to the carapace of the sea turtle to track its migration. |
|
Leading the antipreformationist camp was William Harvey, the first scientist to correctly describe the circulation of blood. |
|
In the book of the Xin Yi Xiang Fa Yao, published in 1092 by the Chinese scientist Su Song, a star map on the equidistant cylindrical projection. |
|
It is based on a number of tests elaborated in the past 15 years by psychology experts of Psychology Faculty of the same university, and also the intelligence test developed by British scientist Hans Jürgen Eysenck. |
|
Join Dr. John C. Mather, cosmologist, Nobel Prize winner in Physics and leading scientist on the JWST project as he enlightens us about this highly sophisticated space instrument. |
|
The E. P. A. is free to bring charges against the scientist again. |
|
Imagine the scenario, says Jakhu, in which an Indian scientist is allowed to conduct experiments in Russia's research module where he or she discovers a cure for cancer. |
|
Portrait of a scientist claiming the right to be a free thinker. |
|
As a scientist I am convinced we understand the way the climate system works well enough and I'm quite at variance with Dr. Pocklington's comment that changing carbon dioxide concentrations is a trivial matter. |
|
After all, Lovelock is one of our most distinguished ecologists, the environment movement's sanest pontificator and a scientist of considerable distinction. |
|
Yet even the most learned scientist does not order a dinner or propose marriage in five-syllable words, some of them manufactured specially for his own use. |
|
He was the first scientist to establish, based on the evidence of seismic wave behaviour, the discontinuity that separates the crust of the planet Earth from the mantle. |
|
Doctor Who creator Steven Moffat has revealed he's not averse to a U-turn and is bringing much-loved UNIT scientist and the Doctor's biggest superfan Osgood back from the dead. |
|
Trees might soon help take the pressure off wastewater treatment plants if university scientist Douglas Frederick has his way. |
|
Syndicalist Vilim Ribiæ said that scientist were not too disturbed. |
|
The son of a Polish scientist and a Peruvian from the coast, Szyszlo is also at odds with respect to his artistic sources: Pre-Colombian art, European avant-gardism, certain North American and Latin American painters. |
|
Let not the scientist be vain in his material work or his science, for in it my revelation has always been present as has the help of the spiritual world that inspires from the hereafter. |
|
I am not suggesting that the social sciences and the humanities are there to help scientist to put one over on the population, nor am I suggesting that the traffic is oneway. |
|
|
Why, for example, would a natural scientist study disarmament treaties? |
|
Or a teacher or a natural scientist for that matter. |
|
The actual breakthrough was accomplished by Sir Francis Galton in 1888, a natural scientist and geneticist who is said to be the founder of dactyloscopy, the method of comparing fingerprints for identification. |
|
Alexander Moiseev is a lead scientist for the Fermi Space Telescope's Large Area Telescope AntiCoincidence Detector, one of the LAT subsystems. |
|
He was neither a scientist nor a man well-versed in classical culture. |
|
How could the ultimate scientist have been seemingly hornswoggled by a totemic psuedoscience like alchemy, which in its commonest rendering is described as the desire to transform lead into gold? |
|
Stephen Cooper, a computer scientist at Stanford, agreed. |
|
He is a computer scientist with a passion for music. |
|
It's by a brilliant young computer scientist called Kate Unsworth. |
|
The real stimulus for Rebecca, a computer scientist and now manager of Google Earth Outreach, was using Google Earth to help protect her local area. |
|
Computer scientist Constance Adsett wants to minimize that problem by finding the best tools for automatically breaking words into their proper syllables. |
|
Being a physicist and computer scientist with 15 years of experience in the high-tech industry, he combines broad knowledge in a range of technologies with an understanding of their economic and strategic significance. |
|
Though he would have had all the best reasons for giving up, Benoît persevered and said to himself that he would one day make his dream of becoming a computer scientist a reality. |
|
The ever-expanding world of communications networks may run more efficiently thanks to doctoral research done by computer scientist Lap Chi Lau at the University of Toronto. |
|
Dominik Grüntjens will help us find a computer scientist or a computer that is ready in October, to help us for two to three weeks for the completion of Minlufu. |
|
Her mother is dead and her father is a reclusive inventor who spends most of his life in his mad scientist lab. |
|
In some universities in Texas, when a scientist gives a lecture on evolutionism, some religious lobbies insist that a Fixist lecture be held subsequently, explaining the truth revealed about the origins of humankind. |
|
The most attractive feature of stem cells for the medical scientist is the possibility of their being used to replace cells that have died because of disease or trauma. |
|
In 2000 Mukai was the deputy mission scientist for the STS-107 mission, which flew in January 2003 and ended in tragedy when the space shuttle Columbia disintegrated and the crew perished during atmospheric reentry. |
|
Painfully, on the flipside, I can think of few things in the life of a scientist more disheartening or demoralizing than having a grant rejected, for in one sense, it is a rejection of your vision as a scientist. |
|
|
The author makes the science approachable and understandable for the lay person, and the life of this extraordinary scientist is fascinating aside from the science. |
|
You do not need to be a rocket scientist to realize that those who talk about all the time, money and efficiency lost are sticking their heads deep in the sand. |
|
One does not have to be a rocket scientist to understand that something is amiss when Russia is backing the winner and that the independence of Ukraine is very well in jeopardy. |
|
I'm not a technical expert on trade policy, but it doesn't take a rocket scientist to read some of the history of Canada's past couple of decades. |
|
It doesn't take a rocket scientist to realize that by the time the shortfall has been corrected, we'll again be behind by about another three years. |
|
The majority of them are university students, but there's also a factory worker, a scientist without a fixed job, a working student and an artist. |
|
A scientist with an engaging personality and genuine presentational skills will certainly find a place on the radio, but not everybody can lay claim to such qualities. |
|
Anthony Sinclair is a scientist who has worked there intermittently since 1965 recording the movement and behaviour of a range of animals from the aardvark to the zebra. |
|
As coauthor of 170 funded medical research studies in the last five years alone, Wells is a senior scientist of serious repute with a long list of titles to match. |
|
In tribute to the pursuit of research excellence the late Canadian scientist Bertram N. Brockhouse exemplified and inspired, NSERC offers an interdisciplinary research prize in his name. |
|
A research scientist found that the human motivators were, in ascending order, possibility of advancement, responsibility, the work itself, recognition, and sense of achievement. |
|
When watching a Hollywood movie that has robed itself in the themes and paraphernalia of science, a scientist expects to feel anything from annoyance to infuriation at facts misconstrued or processes misrepresented. |
|
In our university laboratories you won't see a researcher whispering to another scientist in a corridor and then shutting up when a student passes within earshot! |
|
Member of the learned society and a scientist during the Age of Enlightenment, he was the commander on board the first hot-air balloon flight, in the company of the Marquis of Arlandes. |
|
Biggie and his friends said good-bye and left the scientist to his work. |
|
Contrary to many prejudices this scientist is a competent user of computer programs. He even took part in developing a program for musical notation. |
|
He describes MacGill's life as the fluctuating tension between her commitment as a scientist and engineer and the social concerns and influence of her mother, the suffragette and judge Helen MacGill. |
|
By positing an idealised world of perfect competition, economic theory assumed away the factors that drove societies. Mr Galbraith was thus less an economist than a mixture of sociologist, political scientist and journalist. |
|
In 1815 a scientist by the name of Humphry Davy came up with the first effective safety lamp, whose flame was screened off from the pit gas by an extremely thin wire trellis. |
|
Almost a quarter of a century ago James Hansen, the NASA scientist who did more than anyone to put climate change on the agenda, suggested the analogy of loaded dice. |
|