Word: cooler
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Reagan's softer line was not aimed so much at Moscow as at the American electorate. If he has a political vulnerability, it is the state of relations between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R., which are cooler than at any time since the Cuban missile crisis in 1962. "The risk we face now is that the people view the President as being locked in concrete and against negotiations with the Soviets," says a senior White House adviser. In taking a more conciliatory tack, he said, Reagan was "making sure the Democrats don't have an issue...
Because the track was laid during cooler weather, the material had not stretched out enough, and when temperatures rose, so did the bubbles...
Even for a town given to loud arguments over potholes and Billy Martin, the latest squabble in New York City seemed frivolous. To some, it became known as the Great Brown-Bagging Controversy. But to others, it looked more like a tempest in a wine cooler. It all began with an innocent New York Times story about 16 restaurants that permitted patrons to bring in their own wine. In Manhattan, where a $5 bottle of wine can cost $15 in a moderately priced restaurant, many customers beat the system by finding a dining spot without a liquor license and then...
...cast its lot with its (newly rich) "Arab brethren." Black Africa broke off relations with Israel and began voting as a block with the Arabs and against Israel at the U.N. At the same time, the West Europeans, who have always put money ahead of morality, became markedly cooler in their relations with Israel, and attempted to steer a neutral course in the Arab-Israeli conflict...
...doctors who performed the operation--including Collins, Mudge, Professor of Surgery Lawrence H. Cohn, and Dr. Robert J. Shemin--all participated in last week's transplant. Shemin transported the donor heart from Worcester in the same picnic cooler used last week to carry Boucher's new organ...